Michel Crozier's Long March: the Making of The Bureaucratic Phenomenon
Identifieur interne : 001535 ( France/Analysis ); précédent : 001534; suivant : 001536Michel Crozier's Long March: the Making of The Bureaucratic Phenomenon
Auteurs : Pierre Grémion [France]Source :
- Political Studies [ 0032-3217 ] ; 1992-03.
Abstract
Crozier's Bureaucratic Phenomenon was a landmark in the development of both the sociology of organizations as a research approach and the study of French society in the 1960s. To understand its genesis requires an exercise in the history ofcontemporary thought, locating Crozier's magnum opus within the context of the influence of Gouldner, March and Simon. His initial intellectual preoccupation was with the role of trade unions in the US and France during the cold war. This led to his main cultural finding: the fear of face‐to‐face communication. requiring impersonal mediation to avoid confrontation with those in authority. France required a new style of authority and her intellectuals should provide it as a way of dealing with the problem of overcoming cultural lag and changing France into a modern industrial society.
Url:
DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-9248.1992.tb01757.x
Affiliations:
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<front><div type="abstract" xml:lang="en">Crozier's Bureaucratic Phenomenon was a landmark in the development of both the sociology of organizations as a research approach and the study of French society in the 1960s. To understand its genesis requires an exercise in the history ofcontemporary thought, locating Crozier's magnum opus within the context of the influence of Gouldner, March and Simon. His initial intellectual preoccupation was with the role of trade unions in the US and France during the cold war. This led to his main cultural finding: the fear of face‐to‐face communication. requiring impersonal mediation to avoid confrontation with those in authority. France required a new style of authority and her intellectuals should provide it as a way of dealing with the problem of overcoming cultural lag and changing France into a modern industrial society.</div>
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