1970
DOI: 10.2307/2574655
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Bureaucracy and Alienation: A Dimensional Approach

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1
1
1
1

Citation Types

1
22
0
2

Year Published

1972
1972
2017
2017

Publication Types

Select...
8
2

Relationship

0
10

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 56 publications
(25 citation statements)
references
References 10 publications
1
22
0
2
Order By: Relevance
“…They argue that these combinations can lead to a ''vicious circle of bureaucracy'' and Adler and Borys (1996), Argyris (1990b), Canales (2014), Gulati and Puranam (2009), Lewis (2000), MacDuffie (1995) bureaucratic-conformity rituals (Crozier, 1964;Masuch, 1985;Merton, 1957). In the case of process-oriented collectivist systems, excessive rule making and pressures to follow these rules can trigger psychological stress (Rousseau, 1978), job dissatisfaction (Arches, 1991), powerlessness and self-estrangement (Kakabadse, 1986), anomie (Bonjean & Grimes, 1970), and other dysfunctional responses. At some point, people become ''walled in'' and the cycle stabilizes (Gouldner, 1954) into a low-morale/ low-innovation/high-acquiescence equilibrium (Burns & Stalker, 1961;Morse & Lorsch, 1970;Thompson, 1965).…”
Section: The Disadvantages: Excessive Conformitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They argue that these combinations can lead to a ''vicious circle of bureaucracy'' and Adler and Borys (1996), Argyris (1990b), Canales (2014), Gulati and Puranam (2009), Lewis (2000), MacDuffie (1995) bureaucratic-conformity rituals (Crozier, 1964;Masuch, 1985;Merton, 1957). In the case of process-oriented collectivist systems, excessive rule making and pressures to follow these rules can trigger psychological stress (Rousseau, 1978), job dissatisfaction (Arches, 1991), powerlessness and self-estrangement (Kakabadse, 1986), anomie (Bonjean & Grimes, 1970), and other dysfunctional responses. At some point, people become ''walled in'' and the cycle stabilizes (Gouldner, 1954) into a low-morale/ low-innovation/high-acquiescence equilibrium (Burns & Stalker, 1961;Morse & Lorsch, 1970;Thompson, 1965).…”
Section: The Disadvantages: Excessive Conformitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the sociological literature, which focused mainly on the alienation side of the commitment continuum, concepts such as the following were used to describe the sociological state of alienation or alienation-related conditions (also compare Dean, 1961): apathy (Keniston, 1957), anomie (in the early writings of Durkheim, 1893;Hegel, 1949;Marx, 1963), authoritarianism (Adorno, 1950), automation, bureaucratisation (Bonjean & Grimes, 1970), conformity (Fromm, 1958), cynicism (Merton, 1947), hoboism (Grodzins, 1956), prejudice (Adorno, 1950), psychosis (Jaco, 1954) privatisation (Kris & Leites, 1950), regression (DeGrazia, 1948), political apathy (Rosenberg, 1951), political hyperactivity (Riesman & Glazer, 1950) personalisation in politics (Adorno, 1950) or even suicide (Powell, 1958), which are in most cases related to social-structural conditions. Sociological alienation was thus assessed on a group or a social systems level by using epi-phenomenological categories such as 'powerlessness' and 'normlessness' (Seeman, 1959) to describe socio-pathological conditions.…”
Section: Concept Redundancy and Contaminationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some of these studies have used general scales with samples in specific settings (e.g., Seeman and Evans 1967;Bonjean and Grimes 1970), while others have developed specific situational scales (e.g., Holian 1972;Shepard and Panko 1974). On the other hand, both Burbach (1972) and Wahba (1980) present evidence which questions the superiority of situational scales over general scales.…”
Section: Findings and Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%