
This book is about micro-politics: that kind of manoevre to control or avoid being controlled, to claim friendship or proclaim enmity, which takes place between people who know one another, and who must temper and adjust their actions towards one another because they share other activities. They are members of the one community and of the same organization, and this not only moderates their actions but also provides them with themes for use in the political arena.These justificatory themes and the irresolvable contradictions between them, and what is to be done when decisions cannot be made through rational procedures, is one subject of the book. The setting is the university world of committees and dons and administrators, but the inquiry is into general questions about organizational life. How are value contradictions resolved? Why are some matters discussed openly and others only before restricted audiences? Could we dispense with confidentiality and secrecy? What masks are used to make a person or a point of view persuasive?It is impossible and therefore wholly unwise to try to attempt to run such organizations in a wholly open and wholly rational fashion: without an appropriate measure of pretence and secrecy, even of hypocrisy, they cannot be made to work. At a basic level organizations require secrecy and confidentiality to run effectively.
This book investigates the fundamental tension between rational organizational procedures and the necessary, often clandestine, micro-political maneuvers required to maintain institutional stability. F. G. Bailey, an anthropologist, utilizes his observations of university life to analyze how individuals navigate the contradictions between stated moral values and the pragmatic requirements of power. He argues that organizational functionality often relies on a degree of secrecy, pretence, and strategic ambiguity that defies purely rational management models.
What You Will Find
Scholars of organizational anthropology frequently cite this work for its candid exploration of the informal power structures that underpin formal institutions. Readers often note the author's ability to translate complex social dynamics into accessible, practical observations about human behavior in professional environments.
Page Count:
240
Publication Date:
2007-02-15
Publisher:
Routledge
ISBN-10:
0202309223
ISBN-13:
9780202309224
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