Email and the subversion of organisational culture

Email is, in the early part of the 21st century, an integral part of organisational life. Its centrality has resulted in it being more than a mere organisational process. Rather, email represents a vehicle by which organisational culture develops. Using concepts of “email communities” and “insider-o...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Freke, David Roy
Other Authors: James, Nalita
Published: University of Leicester 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.551922
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-5519222015-04-03T03:19:54ZEmail and the subversion of organisational cultureFreke, David RoyJames, Nalita2012Email is, in the early part of the 21st century, an integral part of organisational life. Its centrality has resulted in it being more than a mere organisational process. Rather, email represents a vehicle by which organisational culture develops. Using concepts of “email communities” and “insider-outsider social habitus” statuses, this phenomenon is explored through evocative ethnography and is found to be both benign and malign. Issues of alternative hierarchies, bullying, inclusion and exclusion emerge. These issues are characterised by a lack of awareness of the effects of their actions on the part of protagonists. Because the protagonists’ actions are not usually deliberate, those suffering the effects doubt the validity of their experiences and feelings. From the organisational perspective, official notions of organisational culture and organisational values are compromised or even rendered irrelevant. This in turn compromises the honesty and integrity of organisations in respect of the ways in which they present themselves to their employees and the outside world. Organisations, however, are largely unaware of these effects as the insider-outsider social habitus concept does not engage with the structural culture-as-an-entity understanding favoured by organisations. Remedies, examined within the compass of organisational learning and knowledge management are explored, with a need for remedies within both concepts being found to be necessary, together with a need for emotional intelligence.306.3University of Leicesterhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.551922http://hdl.handle.net/2381/10807Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 306.3
spellingShingle 306.3
Freke, David Roy
Email and the subversion of organisational culture
description Email is, in the early part of the 21st century, an integral part of organisational life. Its centrality has resulted in it being more than a mere organisational process. Rather, email represents a vehicle by which organisational culture develops. Using concepts of “email communities” and “insider-outsider social habitus” statuses, this phenomenon is explored through evocative ethnography and is found to be both benign and malign. Issues of alternative hierarchies, bullying, inclusion and exclusion emerge. These issues are characterised by a lack of awareness of the effects of their actions on the part of protagonists. Because the protagonists’ actions are not usually deliberate, those suffering the effects doubt the validity of their experiences and feelings. From the organisational perspective, official notions of organisational culture and organisational values are compromised or even rendered irrelevant. This in turn compromises the honesty and integrity of organisations in respect of the ways in which they present themselves to their employees and the outside world. Organisations, however, are largely unaware of these effects as the insider-outsider social habitus concept does not engage with the structural culture-as-an-entity understanding favoured by organisations. Remedies, examined within the compass of organisational learning and knowledge management are explored, with a need for remedies within both concepts being found to be necessary, together with a need for emotional intelligence.
author2 James, Nalita
author_facet James, Nalita
Freke, David Roy
author Freke, David Roy
author_sort Freke, David Roy
title Email and the subversion of organisational culture
title_short Email and the subversion of organisational culture
title_full Email and the subversion of organisational culture
title_fullStr Email and the subversion of organisational culture
title_full_unstemmed Email and the subversion of organisational culture
title_sort email and the subversion of organisational culture
publisher University of Leicester
publishDate 2012
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.551922
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