AdlerPaul S.AdlyAmrArmaniosDaniel E.BattilanaJulieBodrožićZlatkoCleggStewart, et al. (2023). Authoritarianism, populism, and the global retreat of democracy: A curated discussion. Journal of Management Inquiry, 32, 3–20.
BarleyStephen R.TolbertPamela S. (1997). Institutional and structuration: Studying the links between action and institution. Organization Studies, 18, 93–117.
4.
BechkyBeth A.DavisGerald F. (2025). Resisting the algorithmic management of science: Craft and community after generative AI. Administrative Science Quarterly, 70, 1–22.
5.
BergerPeter L.LuckmannThomas (1966). The social construction of reality (Penguin Press edition, 1967). New York, NY: Doubleday & Co.
6.
BrownAndrew D.ColvilleIanPyeAnnie (2014). Making sense of sensemaking in Organization Studies. Organization Studies, 36, 265–277.
ChaudhryAmnaAmisJohn M. (2025). Desperate journeys to Europe: Sensebreaking in extreme contexts. Journal of Management Studies, 62, 1153–1190.
9.
CourpassonDavid (2000). Managerial strategies of domination. Power in soft bureaucracies. Organization Studies, 21, 141–161.
10.
CzarniawskaBarbaraHernesTor (Eds.) (2020). ANT and organizing (2nd ed.). Lund: Studentlitteratur.
11.
de BakkerFrankden HondFrankKingBraydenWeberKlaus (2010). Organization Studies: Special issue on ‘Social movements, civil societies and corporations’. Organization Studies, 31, 1173–1174.
12.
de RondMark (2017). Doctors at war: An ethnographer’s account of life and death in a field hospital. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.
13.
DentoniDomenico (2024). Heat and organization studies: Organizing in a world approaching 50 C. Organization Studies, 45, 1523–1537.
14.
DiMaggioPaul J.PowellWalter W. (1983). The Iron Cage revisited: Institutional isomorphism and collective rationality. American Journal of Sociology, 48, 147–160.
15.
GeertzClifford (1993). The interpretation of cultures. New York, NY: Basic Books.
16.
GrandoriAnna (2023). Williamson and organization studies: Reclaiming a legacy. Organization Studies, 44, 1175–1190.
17.
HagtvedtLydia PaineHarveySarahDemir-CaliskanOzumcanHagtvedtHenrik (2025). Bright and dark imagining: How creators navigate moral consequences of developing ideas for artificial intelligence. Academy of Management Journal, 68, 19–49.
18.
HällgrenMarkusRouleauLindaDe RondMark (2018). A matter of life or death: How extreme context research matters for management and organization studies. Academy of Management Annals, 12, 111–153.
19.
HardtMichaelNegriAntonio (2000). Empire. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
20.
HerathDinuka B.SecchiDavideHombergFabian (2025). Disorganization management: What is it, how does it work, and why does it matter?Academy of Management Annals, 19, 404–433.
JarzabkowskiPaula (2004). Strategy as practice: Recursiveness, adaptation, and practices-in-use. Organization Studies, 25, 529–560.
23.
JarzabkowskiPaulaUngerCorinneMeissnerKatie (2025). Valuing what you risk and risking what you value: Advancing a research agenda for risk studies. Organization Studies, 46, 121–139.
24.
KaramCharlotte M.DeJordyRichCreedW. E. DouglasDaouk-ÖyryLinaScottShawn P.GehaCarmenDaouAlain (2024). Resourcing agency for sustained collective action amid creeping crises. Organization Studies, 46, 967–994.
25.
Kendall-TackettKathleen (2023). Recent research on secondary trauma. Psychological Trauma: Theory, Research, Practice, and Policy, 15(Suppl. 2), S201–S202.
26.
KieserAlfred (1998). From freemasons to industrious patriots. Organizing and disciplining in 18th century Germany. Organization Studies, 19, 47–71.
27.
KodeihFarahSchildtHenriLawrenceThomas B. (2022). Countering indeterminate temporariness: Sheltering work in refugee camps. Organization Studies, 44, 175–199.
28.
KornbergerMartinMeyerRenate E.MartíIgnasiFrey-HegerCorinnaCornelissenJoepGatzweilerMarian (2025). Collective action in crisis? Introduction to the Special Issue. Organization Studies, 46, 919–939.
29.
LangleyAnn (1999). Strategies for theorizing from process data. The Academy of Management Review, 24, 691–710.
30.
LatourBruno (1991). We have never been modern. London: Sage.
31.
LeviPrimo (1986). I sommersi e i salvati. Turin: Einaudi.
32.
MeyerRenate E. (2025). Wicked crises and the (in)capacity to act. Administrative Science Quarterly, 70 (forthcoming).
33.
MeyerRenate E.QuattronePaolo (2023). Reflections on organizing in/for peace and war times. Organization Studies, 44, 299–300.
34.
MutchAlistair (2016). Bringing history into the study of routines: Contextualizing performance. Organization Studies, 37, 1171–1188.
35.
O’DohertyDamianDe CockCarl (2024). Politics in organization studies: Multi-disciplinary traditions and interstitial positions. Organization Studies, 45, 745–766.
36.
QuattronePaolo (2006). The possibility of the testimony. A case for case study research. Organization, 13, 143–157.
37.
ScottW. Richard (2008). Lords of the dance: Professionals as institutional agents. Organization Studies, 29, 219–238.
38.
SeidlDavidWhittingtonRichard (2014). Enlarging the strategy-as-practice research agenda: Towards taller and flatter ontologies. Organization Studies, 35, 1407–1421.
39.
SouleSarah A. (2012). Social movements and markets, industries, and firms. Organization Studies, 33, 1715–1733.
40.
SutherlandJohn W. (1975). Systems: Analysis, administration, and architecture. New York, NY: Van Nostrand.
41.
WhittingtonRichard (2006). Completing the practice turn in strategy research. Organization Studies, 27, 613–634.
42.
WilliamsonOliver E. (1993). Transaction cost economics and organization theory. Industrial and Corporate Change, 2, 107–156.