Consilio Manuque: The Learning Organization
Paradigm and the Problem of Unity
Graham Symon. Tamara : Journal of Critical Postmodern Organization Science.
Las Cruces: 2003. Vol. 2, Iss. 2; pg. 36, 19 pgs
Abstract
This paper draws on literature in the fields of organizational studies, industrial
relations, and industrial sociology to attempt to address ‘new paradigm’
managerial initiatives that espouse sentiments of unitarism in their discourse
from a UK perspective. The specific focus of this theoretical investigation
is the output of the proponents of the ‘Learning Organization’.
It is argued that in such organizations, employers attempt to control and induce
behavioral change in employees through the use of reorganization and instrumental
discourse. Managerial commentators and theorists have written much about what
the implementing agents’ expectations are of the outcomes of such organizational
initiatives. Among these expectations is that the new initiative will bring
about a radical change in attitudes in the workplace and that unitarism will
prevail. However, an as yet underdeveloped area of study is what happens when
the subjects (i.e. employees) receive the initiative, the potential for counter-ideology
and resistance to the initiative, and the forms resistance may take. It is these
latter two issues that this paper concentrates on. Ultimately, the paper seeks
to present a conceptual investigation of pluralism within, and the nature and
implications of resistance in, the Learning Organization. An allusion to Beaumarchais’
‘Figaro’ is used to illustrate the arguments.