-
1
-
-
85181790197
-
-
Berkeley: University of California Press
-
See, e.g., Robert Nelson, Partners with Power: Social Transformation of the Large Law Firm (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1989); Marc Galanter & Thomas M. Palay, Tournament of Lawyers: The Transformation of the Big Law Firm (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1991); Wolf Heydebrand & Carroll Seron, Rationalizing Justice: The Political Economy of Federal District Courts (Albany, N.Y.: State University of New York Press, 1990); Alfred Blumrosen, Modern Law: The Transmission System and Equal Employment Opportunity (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1993) ("Blumrosen, Modern Law").
-
(1989)
Partners with Power: Social Transformation of the Large Law Firm
-
-
Nelson, R.1
-
2
-
-
0003905356
-
-
Chicago: University of Chicago Press
-
See, e.g., Robert Nelson, Partners with Power: Social Transformation of the Large Law Firm (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1989); Marc Galanter & Thomas M. Palay, Tournament of Lawyers: The Transformation of the Big Law Firm (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1991); Wolf Heydebrand & Carroll Seron, Rationalizing Justice: The Political Economy of Federal District Courts (Albany, N.Y.: State University of New York Press, 1990); Alfred Blumrosen, Modern Law: The Transmission System and Equal Employment Opportunity (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1993) ("Blumrosen, Modern Law").
-
(1991)
Tournament of Lawyers: The Transformation of the Big Law Firm
-
-
Galanter, M.1
Palay, T.M.2
-
3
-
-
0007180757
-
-
Albany, N.Y.: State University of New York Press
-
See, e.g., Robert Nelson, Partners with Power: Social Transformation of the Large Law Firm (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1989); Marc Galanter & Thomas M. Palay, Tournament of Lawyers: The Transformation of the Big Law Firm (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1991); Wolf Heydebrand & Carroll Seron, Rationalizing Justice: The Political Economy of Federal District Courts (Albany, N.Y.: State University of New York Press, 1990); Alfred Blumrosen, Modern Law: The Transmission System and Equal Employment Opportunity (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1993) ("Blumrosen, Modern Law").
-
(1990)
Rationalizing Justice: The Political Economy of Federal District Courts
-
-
Heydebrand, W.1
Seron, C.2
-
4
-
-
0003955594
-
-
Madison: University of Wisconsin Press
-
See, e.g., Robert Nelson, Partners with Power: Social Transformation of the Large Law Firm (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1989); Marc Galanter & Thomas M. Palay, Tournament of Lawyers: The Transformation of the Big Law Firm (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1991); Wolf Heydebrand & Carroll Seron, Rationalizing Justice: The Political Economy of Federal District Courts (Albany, N.Y.: State University of New York Press, 1990); Alfred Blumrosen, Modern Law: The Transmission System and Equal Employment Opportunity (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1993) ("Blumrosen, Modern Law").
-
(1993)
Modern Law: The Transmission System and Equal Employment Opportunity
-
-
Blumrosen, A.1
-
5
-
-
84883987349
-
-
See, e.g., Robert Nelson, Partners with Power: Social Transformation of the Large Law Firm (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1989); Marc Galanter & Thomas M. Palay, Tournament of Lawyers: The Transformation of the Big Law Firm (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1991); Wolf Heydebrand & Carroll Seron, Rationalizing Justice: The Political Economy of Federal District Courts (Albany, N.Y.: State University of New York Press, 1990); Alfred Blumrosen, Modern Law: The Transmission System and Equal Employment Opportunity (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1993) ("Blumrosen, Modern Law").
-
Modern Law
-
-
Blumrosen1
-
6
-
-
0001470630
-
Transaction-Cost Economics: The Governance of Contractual Relations
-
See, e.g., Oliver E. Williamson, "Transaction-Cost Economics: The Governance of Contractual Relations," 22 J.L. & Econ. 233-61 (1979); Mark C. Suchman & Mia L. Cahill, "The Hired-Gun as Conciliator: The Case of Lawyers in Silicon Valley" (presented at University of Wisconsin Institute of Legal Studies Conference on Business Disputing, Madison, 1993); James N. Baron, Frank R. Dobbin, & P. Devereaux Jennings, "War and Peace: The Evolution of Modern Personnel Administration in U.S. Industry," 92 Am. J. Soc. 350 (1986); Frank R. Dobbin, Lauren Edelman, John W. Meyer, W. Richard Scott, & Ann Swidler, "The Expansion of Due Process in Organizations," in Lynne G. Zucker, ed., Institutional Patterns in Organizations: Culture and Environment (Cambridge, Mass: Ballinger, 1988) ("Dobbin et al., 'Expansion of Due Process'"); Lauren B. Edelman, "Legal Environments and Organizational Governance: The Expansion of Due Process in the Workplace," 95 Am. J. Soc. 1401 (1990); id., "Legal Ambiguity and Symbolic Structures: Organizational Mediation of Civil Rights Law," 97 Am. J. Soc. 1531 (1992); Neil Fligstein, The Transformation of Corporate Control (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1990) ("Fligstein, Transformation").
-
(1979)
J.L. & Econ.
, vol.22
, pp. 233-261
-
-
Williamson, O.E.1
-
7
-
-
10144239414
-
The Hired-Gun as Conciliator: The Case of Lawyers in Silicon Valley
-
Madison
-
See, e.g., Oliver E. Williamson, "Transaction-Cost Economics: The Governance of Contractual Relations," 22 J.L. & Econ. 233-61 (1979); Mark C. Suchman & Mia L. Cahill, "The Hired-Gun as Conciliator: The Case of Lawyers in Silicon Valley" (presented at University of Wisconsin Institute of Legal Studies Conference on Business Disputing, Madison, 1993); James N. Baron, Frank R. Dobbin, & P. Devereaux Jennings, "War and Peace: The Evolution of Modern Personnel Administration in U.S. Industry," 92 Am. J. Soc. 350 (1986); Frank R. Dobbin, Lauren Edelman, John W. Meyer, W. Richard Scott, & Ann Swidler, "The Expansion of Due Process in Organizations," in Lynne G. Zucker, ed., Institutional Patterns in Organizations: Culture and Environment (Cambridge, Mass: Ballinger, 1988) ("Dobbin et al., 'Expansion of Due Process'"); Lauren B. Edelman, "Legal Environments and Organizational Governance: The Expansion of Due Process in the Workplace," 95 Am. J. Soc. 1401 (1990); id., "Legal Ambiguity and Symbolic Structures: Organizational Mediation of Civil Rights Law," 97 Am. J. Soc. 1531 (1992); Neil Fligstein, The Transformation of Corporate Control (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1990) ("Fligstein, Transformation").
-
(1993)
University of Wisconsin Institute of Legal Studies Conference on Business Disputing
-
-
Suchman, M.C.1
Cahill, M.L.2
-
8
-
-
84936628654
-
War and Peace: The Evolution of Modern Personnel Administration in U.S. Industry
-
See, e.g., Oliver E. Williamson, "Transaction-Cost Economics: The Governance of Contractual Relations," 22 J.L. & Econ. 233-61 (1979); Mark C. Suchman & Mia L. Cahill, "The Hired-Gun as Conciliator: The Case of Lawyers in Silicon Valley" (presented at University of Wisconsin Institute of Legal Studies Conference on Business Disputing, Madison, 1993); James N. Baron, Frank R. Dobbin, & P. Devereaux Jennings, "War and Peace: The Evolution of Modern Personnel Administration in U.S. Industry," 92 Am. J. Soc. 350 (1986); Frank R. Dobbin, Lauren Edelman, John W. Meyer, W. Richard Scott, & Ann Swidler, "The Expansion of Due Process in Organizations," in Lynne G. Zucker, ed., Institutional Patterns in Organizations: Culture and Environment (Cambridge, Mass: Ballinger, 1988) ("Dobbin et al., 'Expansion of Due Process'"); Lauren B. Edelman, "Legal Environments and Organizational Governance: The Expansion of Due Process in the Workplace," 95 Am. J. Soc. 1401 (1990); id., "Legal Ambiguity and Symbolic Structures: Organizational Mediation of Civil Rights Law," 97 Am. J. Soc. 1531 (1992); Neil Fligstein, The Transformation of Corporate Control (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1990) ("Fligstein, Transformation").
-
(1986)
Am. J. Soc.
, vol.92
, pp. 350
-
-
Baron, J.N.1
Dobbin, F.R.2
Jennings, P.D.3
-
9
-
-
0001846439
-
The Expansion of Due Process in Organizations
-
Lynne G. Zucker, ed., Cambridge, Mass: Ballinger
-
See, e.g., Oliver E. Williamson, "Transaction-Cost Economics: The Governance of Contractual Relations," 22 J.L. & Econ. 233-61 (1979); Mark C. Suchman & Mia L. Cahill, "The Hired-Gun as Conciliator: The Case of Lawyers in Silicon Valley" (presented at University of Wisconsin Institute of Legal Studies Conference on Business Disputing, Madison, 1993); James N. Baron, Frank R. Dobbin, & P. Devereaux Jennings, "War and Peace: The Evolution of Modern Personnel Administration in U.S. Industry," 92 Am. J. Soc. 350 (1986); Frank R. Dobbin, Lauren Edelman, John W. Meyer, W. Richard Scott, & Ann Swidler, "The Expansion of Due Process in Organizations," in Lynne G. Zucker, ed., Institutional Patterns in Organizations: Culture and Environment (Cambridge, Mass: Ballinger, 1988) ("Dobbin et al., 'Expansion of Due Process'"); Lauren B. Edelman, "Legal Environments and Organizational Governance: The Expansion of Due Process in the Workplace," 95 Am. J. Soc. 1401 (1990); id., "Legal Ambiguity and Symbolic Structures: Organizational Mediation of Civil Rights Law," 97 Am. J. Soc. 1531 (1992); Neil Fligstein, The Transformation of Corporate Control (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1990) ("Fligstein, Transformation").
-
(1988)
Institutional Patterns in Organizations: Culture and Environment
-
-
Dobbin, F.R.1
Edelman, L.2
Meyer, J.W.3
Scott, W.R.4
Swidler, A.5
-
10
-
-
85032997930
-
-
See, e.g., Oliver E. Williamson, "Transaction-Cost Economics: The Governance of Contractual Relations," 22 J.L. & Econ. 233-61 (1979); Mark C. Suchman & Mia L. Cahill, "The Hired-Gun as Conciliator: The Case of Lawyers in Silicon Valley" (presented at University of Wisconsin Institute of Legal Studies Conference on Business Disputing, Madison, 1993); James N. Baron, Frank R. Dobbin, & P. Devereaux Jennings, "War and Peace: The Evolution of Modern Personnel Administration in U.S. Industry," 92 Am. J. Soc. 350 (1986); Frank R. Dobbin, Lauren Edelman, John W. Meyer, W. Richard Scott, & Ann Swidler, "The Expansion of Due Process in Organizations," in Lynne G. Zucker, ed., Institutional Patterns in Organizations: Culture and Environment (Cambridge, Mass: Ballinger, 1988) ("Dobbin et al., 'Expansion of Due Process'"); Lauren B. Edelman, "Legal Environments and Organizational Governance: The Expansion of Due Process in the Workplace," 95 Am. J. Soc. 1401 (1990); id., "Legal Ambiguity and Symbolic Structures: Organizational Mediation of Civil Rights Law," 97 Am. J. Soc. 1531 (1992); Neil Fligstein, The Transformation of Corporate Control (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1990) ("Fligstein, Transformation").
-
Expansion of Due Process
-
-
Dobbin1
-
11
-
-
84936823860
-
Legal Environments and Organizational Governance: The Expansion of Due Process in the Workplace
-
See, e.g., Oliver E. Williamson, "Transaction-Cost Economics: The Governance of Contractual Relations," 22 J.L. & Econ. 233-61 (1979); Mark C. Suchman & Mia L. Cahill, "The Hired-Gun as Conciliator: The Case of Lawyers in Silicon Valley" (presented at University of Wisconsin Institute of Legal Studies Conference on Business Disputing, Madison, 1993); James N. Baron, Frank R. Dobbin, & P. Devereaux Jennings, "War and Peace: The Evolution of Modern Personnel Administration in U.S. Industry," 92 Am. J. Soc. 350 (1986); Frank R. Dobbin, Lauren Edelman, John W. Meyer, W. Richard Scott, & Ann Swidler, "The Expansion of Due Process in Organizations," in Lynne G. Zucker, ed., Institutional Patterns in Organizations: Culture and Environment (Cambridge, Mass: Ballinger, 1988) ("Dobbin et al., 'Expansion of Due Process'"); Lauren B. Edelman, "Legal Environments and Organizational Governance: The Expansion of Due Process in the Workplace," 95 Am. J. Soc. 1401 (1990); id., "Legal Ambiguity and Symbolic Structures: Organizational Mediation of Civil Rights Law," 97 Am. J. Soc. 1531 (1992); Neil Fligstein, The Transformation of Corporate Control (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1990) ("Fligstein, Transformation").
-
(1990)
Am. J. Soc.
, vol.95
, pp. 1401
-
-
Edelman, L.B.1
-
12
-
-
0000094797
-
Legal Ambiguity and Symbolic Structures: Organizational Mediation of Civil Rights Law
-
See, e.g., Oliver E. Williamson, "Transaction-Cost Economics: The Governance of Contractual Relations," 22 J.L. & Econ. 233-61 (1979); Mark C. Suchman & Mia L. Cahill, "The Hired-Gun as Conciliator: The Case of Lawyers in Silicon Valley" (presented at University of Wisconsin Institute of Legal Studies Conference on Business Disputing, Madison, 1993); James N. Baron, Frank R. Dobbin, & P. Devereaux Jennings, "War and Peace: The Evolution of Modern Personnel Administration in U.S. Industry," 92 Am. J. Soc. 350 (1986); Frank R. Dobbin, Lauren Edelman, John W. Meyer, W. Richard Scott, & Ann Swidler, "The Expansion of Due Process in Organizations," in Lynne G. Zucker, ed., Institutional Patterns in Organizations: Culture and Environment (Cambridge, Mass: Ballinger, 1988) ("Dobbin et al., 'Expansion of Due Process'"); Lauren B. Edelman, "Legal Environments and Organizational Governance: The Expansion of Due Process in the Workplace," 95 Am. J. Soc. 1401 (1990); id., "Legal Ambiguity and Symbolic Structures: Organizational Mediation of Civil Rights Law," 97 Am. J. Soc. 1531 (1992); Neil Fligstein, The Transformation of Corporate Control (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1990) ("Fligstein, Transformation").
-
(1992)
Am. J. Soc.
, vol.97
, pp. 1531
-
-
Edelman, L.B.1
-
13
-
-
0004235878
-
-
Cambridge: Harvard University Press
-
See, e.g., Oliver E. Williamson, "Transaction-Cost Economics: The Governance of Contractual Relations," 22 J.L. & Econ. 233-61 (1979); Mark C. Suchman & Mia L. Cahill, "The Hired-Gun as Conciliator: The Case of Lawyers in Silicon Valley" (presented at University of Wisconsin Institute of Legal Studies Conference on Business Disputing, Madison, 1993); James N. Baron, Frank R. Dobbin, & P. Devereaux Jennings, "War and Peace: The Evolution of Modern Personnel Administration in U.S. Industry," 92 Am. J. Soc. 350 (1986); Frank R. Dobbin, Lauren Edelman, John W. Meyer, W. Richard Scott, & Ann Swidler, "The Expansion of Due Process in Organizations," in Lynne G. Zucker, ed., Institutional Patterns in Organizations: Culture and Environment (Cambridge, Mass: Ballinger, 1988) ("Dobbin et al., 'Expansion of Due Process'"); Lauren B. Edelman, "Legal Environments and Organizational Governance: The Expansion of Due Process in the Workplace," 95 Am. J. Soc. 1401 (1990); id., "Legal Ambiguity and Symbolic Structures: Organizational Mediation of Civil Rights Law," 97 Am. J. Soc. 1531 (1992); Neil Fligstein, The Transformation of Corporate Control (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1990) ("Fligstein, Transformation").
-
(1990)
The Transformation of Corporate Control
-
-
Fligstein, N.1
-
14
-
-
2942557408
-
-
See, e.g., Oliver E. Williamson, "Transaction-Cost Economics: The Governance of Contractual Relations," 22 J.L. & Econ. 233-61 (1979); Mark C. Suchman & Mia L. Cahill, "The Hired-Gun as Conciliator: The Case of Lawyers in Silicon Valley" (presented at University of Wisconsin Institute of Legal Studies Conference on Business Disputing, Madison, 1993); James N. Baron, Frank R. Dobbin, & P. Devereaux Jennings, "War and Peace: The Evolution of Modern Personnel Administration in U.S. Industry," 92 Am. J. Soc. 350 (1986); Frank R. Dobbin, Lauren Edelman, John W. Meyer, W. Richard Scott, & Ann Swidler, "The Expansion of Due Process in Organizations," in Lynne G. Zucker, ed., Institutional Patterns in Organizations: Culture and Environment (Cambridge, Mass: Ballinger, 1988) ("Dobbin et al., 'Expansion of Due Process'"); Lauren B. Edelman, "Legal Environments and Organizational Governance: The Expansion of Due Process in the Workplace," 95 Am. J. Soc. 1401 (1990); id., "Legal Ambiguity and Symbolic Structures: Organizational Mediation of Civil Rights Law," 97 Am. J. Soc. 1531 (1992); Neil Fligstein, The Transformation of Corporate Control (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1990) ("Fligstein, Transformation").
-
Transformation
-
-
Fligstein1
-
15
-
-
1842652233
-
-
Ph.D. diss., Dep't of Sociology, Stanford University
-
But see Andrew L. Creighton, "The Emergence of Incorporation as a Legal Form for Organizations" (Ph.D. diss., Dep't of Sociology, Stanford University, 1990) ("Creighton, 'Emergence'"); Edelman, 95 Am. J. Soc. and 97 Am. J. Soc.; Mark C. Suchman, "On Advice of Counsel: Law Firms and Venture Capital Funds as Information Intermediaries in the Structuration of Silicon Valley" (Ph.D. diss., Dep't of Sociology, Stanford University, 1994) ("Suchman, 'On Advice of Counsel'").
-
(1990)
The Emergence of Incorporation As a Legal Form for Organizations
-
-
Creighton, A.L.1
-
16
-
-
85033008650
-
-
But see Andrew L. Creighton, "The Emergence of Incorporation as a Legal Form for Organizations" (Ph.D. diss., Dep't of Sociology, Stanford University, 1990) ("Creighton, 'Emergence'"); Edelman, 95 Am. J. Soc. and 97 Am. J. Soc.; Mark C. Suchman, "On Advice of Counsel: Law Firms and Venture Capital Funds as Information Intermediaries in the Structuration of Silicon Valley" (Ph.D. diss., Dep't of Sociology, Stanford University, 1994) ("Suchman, 'On Advice of Counsel'").
-
Emergence
-
-
Creighton1
-
17
-
-
85033030123
-
-
But see Andrew L. Creighton, "The Emergence of Incorporation as a Legal Form for Organizations" (Ph.D. diss., Dep't of Sociology, Stanford University, 1990) ("Creighton, 'Emergence'"); Edelman, 95 Am. J. Soc. and 97 Am. J. Soc.; Mark C. Suchman, "On Advice of Counsel: Law Firms and Venture Capital Funds as Information Intermediaries in the Structuration of Silicon Valley" (Ph.D. diss., Dep't of Sociology, Stanford University, 1994) ("Suchman, 'On Advice of Counsel'").
-
Am. J. Soc.
, vol.95
-
-
Edelman1
-
18
-
-
85033029748
-
-
But see Andrew L. Creighton, "The Emergence of Incorporation as a Legal Form for Organizations" (Ph.D. diss., Dep't of Sociology, Stanford University, 1990) ("Creighton, 'Emergence'"); Edelman, 95 Am. J. Soc. and 97 Am. J. Soc.; Mark C. Suchman, "On Advice of Counsel: Law Firms and Venture Capital Funds as Information Intermediaries in the Structuration of Silicon Valley" (Ph.D. diss., Dep't of Sociology, Stanford University, 1994) ("Suchman, 'On Advice of Counsel'").
-
Am. J. Soc.
, vol.97
-
-
-
19
-
-
0003460466
-
-
Ph.D. diss., Dep't of Sociology, Stanford University
-
But see Andrew L. Creighton, "The Emergence of Incorporation as a Legal Form for Organizations" (Ph.D. diss., Dep't of Sociology, Stanford University, 1990) ("Creighton, 'Emergence'"); Edelman, 95 Am. J. Soc. and 97 Am. J. Soc.; Mark C. Suchman, "On Advice of Counsel: Law Firms and Venture Capital Funds as Information Intermediaries in the Structuration of Silicon Valley" (Ph.D. diss., Dep't of Sociology, Stanford University, 1994) ("Suchman, 'On Advice of Counsel'").
-
(1994)
On Advice of Counsel: Law Firms and Venture Capital Funds As Information Intermediaries in the Structuration of Silicon Valley
-
-
Suchman, M.C.1
-
20
-
-
85033014713
-
-
But see Andrew L. Creighton, "The Emergence of Incorporation as a Legal Form for Organizations" (Ph.D. diss., Dep't of Sociology, Stanford University, 1990) ("Creighton, 'Emergence'"); Edelman, 95 Am. J. Soc. and 97 Am. J. Soc.; Mark C. Suchman, "On Advice of Counsel: Law Firms and Venture Capital Funds as Information Intermediaries in the Structuration of Silicon Valley" (Ph.D. diss., Dep't of Sociology, Stanford University, 1994) ("Suchman, 'On Advice of Counsel'").
-
On Advice of Counsel
-
-
Suchman1
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22
-
-
68649116370
-
-
Contributions from Powell & DiMaggio, eds., The New Institutionolism in Organizational Analysis are cited to "New Institutionalism" by author(s) and title and, on repeated citation, by short title.
-
New Institutionalism
-
-
-
23
-
-
34447536569
-
An Essay on Rights
-
E.g., Mark Tushnet, "An Essay on Rights," 62 Tex. L. Rev. 1363 (1984); Peter Gabel, "Reification in Legal Reasoning," 3 Res. L. & Soc. 25 (1980).
-
(1984)
Tex. L. Rev.
, vol.62
, pp. 1363
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Tushnet, M.1
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24
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0002199694
-
Reification in Legal Reasoning
-
E.g., Mark Tushnet, "An Essay on Rights," 62 Tex. L. Rev. 1363 (1984); Peter Gabel, "Reification in Legal Reasoning," 3 Res. L. & Soc. 25 (1980).
-
(1980)
Res. L. & Soc.
, vol.3
, pp. 25
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Gabel, P.1
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25
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85033014477
-
-
E.g., Edelman, 95 Am. J. Soc.; Rikki Abzug & Stephen J. Mezias, "The Fragmented State and Due Process Protections in Organizations: The Case of Comparable Worth," 4 Organization Sci. 433 (1993); Frank R. Dobbin, John R. Sutton, John W. Meyer, & W. Richard Scott, "Equal Employment Opportunity Law and the Construction of Internal Labor Markets," 99 Am. J. Soc. 396 (1993); Carol A. Heimer, "Explaining Variation in the Impact of Law: Organizations, Institutions, and Profession," in Susan Silbey & Austin Sarat, eds., Studies in Law, Politics, and Society (forthcoming) ("Heimer, 'Explaining Variation'").
-
Am. J. Soc.
, vol.95
-
-
Edelman1
-
26
-
-
21144464235
-
The Fragmented State and Due Process Protections in Organizations: The Case of Comparable Worth
-
E.g., Edelman, 95 Am. J. Soc.; Rikki Abzug & Stephen J. Mezias, "The Fragmented State and Due Process Protections in Organizations: The Case of Comparable Worth," 4 Organization Sci. 433 (1993); Frank R. Dobbin, John R. Sutton, John W. Meyer, & W. Richard Scott, "Equal Employment Opportunity Law and the Construction of Internal Labor Markets," 99 Am. J. Soc. 396 (1993); Carol A. Heimer, "Explaining Variation in the Impact of Law: Organizations, Institutions, and Profession," in Susan Silbey & Austin Sarat, eds., Studies in Law, Politics, and Society (forthcoming) ("Heimer, 'Explaining Variation'").
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(1993)
Organization Sci.
, vol.4
, pp. 433
-
-
Abzug, R.1
Mezias, S.J.2
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27
-
-
0027726931
-
Equal Employment Opportunity Law and the Construction of Internal Labor Markets
-
E.g., Edelman, 95 Am. J. Soc.; Rikki Abzug & Stephen J. Mezias, "The Fragmented State and Due Process Protections in Organizations: The Case of Comparable Worth," 4 Organization Sci. 433 (1993); Frank R. Dobbin, John R. Sutton, John W. Meyer, & W. Richard Scott, "Equal Employment Opportunity Law and the Construction of Internal Labor Markets," 99 Am. J. Soc. 396 (1993); Carol A. Heimer, "Explaining Variation in the Impact of Law: Organizations, Institutions, and Profession," in Susan Silbey & Austin Sarat, eds., Studies in Law, Politics, and Society (forthcoming) ("Heimer, 'Explaining Variation'").
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(1993)
Am. J. Soc.
, vol.99
, pp. 396
-
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Dobbin, F.R.1
Sutton, J.R.2
Meyer, J.W.3
Scott, W.R.4
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28
-
-
84937295463
-
Explaining Variation in the Impact of Law: Organizations, Institutions, and Profession
-
Susan Silbey & Austin Sarat, eds., forthcoming
-
E.g., Edelman, 95 Am. J. Soc.; Rikki Abzug & Stephen J. Mezias, "The Fragmented State and Due Process Protections in Organizations: The Case of Comparable Worth," 4 Organization Sci. 433 (1993); Frank R. Dobbin, John R. Sutton, John W. Meyer, & W. Richard Scott, "Equal Employment Opportunity Law and the Construction of Internal Labor Markets," 99 Am. J. Soc. 396 (1993); Carol A. Heimer, "Explaining Variation in the Impact of Law: Organizations, Institutions, and Profession," in Susan Silbey & Austin Sarat, eds., Studies in Law, Politics, and Society (forthcoming) ("Heimer, 'Explaining Variation'").
-
Studies in Law, Politics, and Society
-
-
Heimer, C.A.1
-
29
-
-
85033027317
-
-
E.g., Edelman, 95 Am. J. Soc.; Rikki Abzug & Stephen J. Mezias, "The Fragmented State and Due Process Protections in Organizations: The Case of Comparable Worth," 4 Organization Sci. 433 (1993); Frank R. Dobbin, John R. Sutton, John W. Meyer, & W. Richard Scott, "Equal Employment Opportunity Law and the Construction of Internal Labor Markets," 99 Am. J. Soc. 396 (1993); Carol A. Heimer, "Explaining Variation in the Impact of Law: Organizations, Institutions, and Profession," in Susan Silbey & Austin Sarat, eds., Studies in Law, Politics, and Society (forthcoming) ("Heimer, 'Explaining Variation'").
-
Explaining Variation
-
-
Heimer1
-
30
-
-
0003497263
-
-
New York: Norton
-
E.g., James S. Coleman, Power and the Structure of Society (New York: Norton, 1974); Pamela S. Tolbert & Lynne G. Zucker, "Institutional Sources of Change in the Formal Structure of Organizations: The Diffusion of Civil Service Reform, 1880-1935," 28 Admin. Sci. Q. 22 (1983); Fligstein, Transformation; Gerald F. Davis, "Agents without Principles? The Spread of the Poison Pill through the Intercorporate Network," 36 Admin. Sci. Q. 583 (1991); Gerald Davis & Tracy Thompson, "A Social Movement Perspective on Corporate Control," 39 Admin. Sci. Q. 141 (1994).
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(1974)
Power and the Structure of Society
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Coleman, J.S.1
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31
-
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0000189829
-
Institutional Sources of Change in the Formal Structure of Organizations: The Diffusion of Civil Service Reform, 1880-1935
-
E.g., James S. Coleman, Power and the Structure of Society (New York: Norton, 1974); Pamela S. Tolbert & Lynne G. Zucker, "Institutional Sources of Change in the Formal Structure of Organizations: The Diffusion of Civil Service Reform, 1880-1935," 28 Admin. Sci. Q. 22 (1983); Fligstein, Transformation; Gerald F. Davis, "Agents without Principles? The Spread of the Poison Pill through the Intercorporate Network," 36 Admin. Sci. Q. 583 (1991); Gerald Davis & Tracy Thompson, "A Social Movement Perspective on Corporate Control," 39 Admin. Sci. Q. 141 (1994).
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(1983)
Admin. Sci. Q.
, vol.28
, pp. 22
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Tolbert, P.S.1
Zucker, L.G.2
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32
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2942557408
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E.g., James S. Coleman, Power and the Structure of Society (New York: Norton, 1974); Pamela S. Tolbert & Lynne G. Zucker, "Institutional Sources of Change in the Formal Structure of Organizations: The Diffusion of Civil Service Reform, 1880-1935," 28 Admin. Sci. Q. 22 (1983); Fligstein, Transformation; Gerald F. Davis, "Agents without Principles? The Spread of the Poison Pill through the Intercorporate Network," 36 Admin. Sci. Q. 583 (1991); Gerald Davis & Tracy Thompson, "A Social Movement Perspective on Corporate Control," 39 Admin. Sci. Q. 141 (1994).
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E.g., James S. Coleman, Power and the Structure of Society (New York: Norton, 1974); Pamela S. Tolbert & Lynne G. Zucker, "Institutional Sources of Change in the Formal Structure of Organizations: The Diffusion of Civil Service Reform, 1880-1935," 28 Admin. Sci. Q. 22 (1983); Fligstein, Transformation; Gerald F. Davis, "Agents without Principles? The Spread of the Poison Pill through the Intercorporate Network," 36 Admin. Sci. Q. 583 (1991); Gerald Davis & Tracy Thompson, "A Social Movement Perspective on Corporate Control," 39 Admin. Sci. Q. 141 (1994).
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E.g., Philip Selznick, Law, Society, and Industrial Justice (New York: Russell Sage Foundation, 1969) ("Selznick, Law, Society"); Oliver E. Williamson, Markets and Hierarchies (New York: Free Press, 1975); id., 22 J.L. & Econ. 233 (1979); Edelman, 95 Am. J. Soc. and 97 Am. J. Soc.; Suchman, "On Advice of Counsel"; Robin Stryker, "Rules, Resources, and Legitimacy Processes: Some Implications for Social Conflict, Order, and Change," 99 Am. J. Soc. 847 (1994); Heimer, "Explaining Variation."
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E.g., Philip Selznick, Law, Society, and Industrial Justice (New York: Russell Sage Foundation, 1969) ("Selznick, Law, Society"); Oliver E. Williamson, Markets and Hierarchies (New York: Free Press, 1975); id., 22 J.L. & Econ. 233 (1979); Edelman, 95 Am. J. Soc. and 97 Am. J. Soc.; Suchman, "On Advice of Counsel"; Robin Stryker, "Rules, Resources, and Legitimacy Processes: Some Implications for Social Conflict, Order, and Change," 99 Am. J. Soc. 847 (1994); Heimer, "Explaining Variation."
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E.g., Philip Selznick, Law, Society, and Industrial Justice (New York: Russell Sage Foundation, 1969) ("Selznick, Law, Society"); Oliver E. Williamson, Markets and Hierarchies (New York: Free Press, 1975); id., 22 J.L. & Econ. 233 (1979); Edelman, 95 Am. J. Soc. and 97 Am. J. Soc.; Suchman, "On Advice of Counsel"; Robin Stryker, "Rules, Resources, and Legitimacy Processes: Some Implications for Social Conflict, Order, and Change," 99 Am. J. Soc. 847 (1994); Heimer, "Explaining Variation."
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E.g., Philip Selznick, Law, Society, and Industrial Justice (New York: Russell Sage Foundation, 1969) ("Selznick, Law, Society"); Oliver E. Williamson, Markets and Hierarchies (New York: Free Press, 1975); id., 22 J.L. & Econ. 233 (1979); Edelman, 95 Am. J. Soc. and 97 Am. J. Soc.; Suchman, "On Advice of Counsel"; Robin Stryker, "Rules, Resources, and Legitimacy Processes: Some Implications for Social Conflict, Order, and Change," 99 Am. J. Soc. 847 (1994); Heimer, "Explaining Variation."
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E.g., Philip Selznick, Law, Society, and Industrial Justice (New York: Russell Sage Foundation, 1969) ("Selznick, Law, Society"); Oliver E. Williamson, Markets and Hierarchies (New York: Free Press, 1975); id., 22 J.L. & Econ. 233 (1979); Edelman, 95 Am. J. Soc. and 97 Am. J. Soc.; Suchman, "On Advice of Counsel"; Robin Stryker, "Rules, Resources, and Legitimacy Processes: Some Implications for Social Conflict, Order, and Change," 99 Am. J. Soc. 847 (1994); Heimer, "Explaining Variation."
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E.g., Philip Selznick, Law, Society, and Industrial Justice (New York: Russell Sage Foundation, 1969) ("Selznick, Law, Society"); Oliver E. Williamson, Markets and Hierarchies (New York: Free Press, 1975); id., 22 J.L. & Econ. 233 (1979); Edelman, 95 Am. J. Soc. and 97 Am. J. Soc.; Suchman, "On Advice of Counsel"; Robin Stryker, "Rules, Resources, and Legitimacy Processes: Some Implications for Social Conflict, Order, and Change," 99 Am. J. Soc. 847 (1994); Heimer, "Explaining Variation."
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, vol.99
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44
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By "legal formalism" we refer here to the largely asocial treatment of law that has dominated Anglo-American jurisprudence since the late 1800s (e.g., Christopher C. Langdell, A Selection of Cases on the Law of Contracts (Boston: Little, Brown, 1871); id., Summary of the Law of Contracts (Boston: Little, Brown, 1880)). This philosophy portrays law as an internally coherent and self-contained logical system - a "seamless web" of tightly linked principles, free from class interests and other social influences. Separating law from society, the legal formalist perspective emphasizes abstract doctrines and ahistorical rights, all of which are applied in a uniform, rational, and consistent manner by a neutral and autonomous judiciary. See Thomas Grey, "Langdell's Orthodoxy," 45 U. Pitt. L. Rev. 1 (1983); Anthony Kronman, The Lost Lawyer: Failing Ideals of the Legal Profession (Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap Press, 1993); see also Marc Galanter & David Trubek, "Scholars in Self-Estrangement: Some Reflections on the Crisis of Law and Development Studies in the United States," 1974 Wis. L. Rev. 1062.
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(1871)
A Selection of Cases on the Law of Contracts
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Langdell, C.C.1
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45
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0009191958
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Boston: Little, Brown
-
By "legal formalism" we refer here to the largely asocial treatment of law that has dominated Anglo-American jurisprudence since the late 1800s (e.g., Christopher C. Langdell, A Selection of Cases on the Law of Contracts (Boston: Little, Brown, 1871); id., Summary of the Law of Contracts (Boston: Little, Brown, 1880)). This philosophy portrays law as an internally coherent and self-contained logical system - a "seamless web" of tightly linked principles, free from class interests and other social influences. Separating law from society, the legal formalist perspective emphasizes abstract doctrines and ahistorical rights, all of which are applied in a uniform, rational, and consistent manner by a neutral and autonomous judiciary. See Thomas Grey, "Langdell's Orthodoxy," 45 U. Pitt. L. Rev. 1 (1983); Anthony Kronman, The Lost Lawyer: Failing Ideals of the Legal Profession (Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap Press, 1993); see also Marc Galanter & David Trubek, "Scholars in Self-Estrangement: Some Reflections on the Crisis of Law and Development Studies in the United States," 1974 Wis. L. Rev. 1062.
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(1880)
Summary of the Law of Contracts
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Langdell, C.C.1
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46
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0010002830
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Langdell's Orthodoxy
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By "legal formalism" we refer here to the largely asocial treatment of law that has dominated Anglo-American jurisprudence since the late 1800s (e.g., Christopher C. Langdell, A Selection of Cases on the Law of Contracts (Boston: Little, Brown, 1871); id., Summary of the Law of Contracts (Boston: Little, Brown, 1880)). This philosophy portrays law as an internally coherent and self-contained logical system - a "seamless web" of tightly linked principles, free from class interests and other social influences. Separating law from society, the legal formalist perspective emphasizes abstract doctrines and ahistorical rights, all of which are applied in a uniform, rational, and consistent manner by a neutral and autonomous judiciary. See Thomas Grey, "Langdell's Orthodoxy," 45 U. Pitt. L. Rev. 1 (1983); Anthony Kronman, The Lost Lawyer: Failing Ideals of the Legal Profession (Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap Press, 1993); see also Marc Galanter & David Trubek, "Scholars in Self-Estrangement: Some Reflections on the Crisis of Law and Development Studies in the United States," 1974 Wis. L. Rev. 1062.
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(1983)
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, vol.45
, pp. 1
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Grey, T.1
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47
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0003707417
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Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap Press
-
By "legal formalism" we refer here to the largely asocial treatment of law that has dominated Anglo-American jurisprudence since the late 1800s (e.g., Christopher C. Langdell, A Selection of Cases on the Law of Contracts (Boston: Little, Brown, 1871); id., Summary of the Law of Contracts (Boston: Little, Brown, 1880)). This philosophy portrays law as an internally coherent and self-contained logical system - a "seamless web" of tightly linked principles, free from class interests and other social influences. Separating law from society, the legal formalist perspective emphasizes abstract doctrines and ahistorical rights, all of which are applied in a uniform, rational, and consistent manner by a neutral and autonomous judiciary. See Thomas Grey, "Langdell's Orthodoxy," 45 U. Pitt. L. Rev. 1 (1983); Anthony Kronman, The Lost Lawyer: Failing Ideals of the Legal Profession (Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap Press, 1993); see also Marc Galanter & David Trubek, "Scholars in Self-Estrangement: Some Reflections on the Crisis of Law and Development Studies in the United States," 1974 Wis. L. Rev. 1062.
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(1993)
The Lost Lawyer: Failing Ideals of the Legal Profession
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Kronman, A.1
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48
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84863544364
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Scholars in Self-Estrangement: Some Reflections on the Crisis of Law and Development Studies in the United States
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By "legal formalism" we refer here to the largely asocial treatment of law that has dominated Anglo-American jurisprudence since the late 1800s (e.g., Christopher C. Langdell, A Selection of Cases on the Law of Contracts (Boston: Little, Brown, 1871); id., Summary of the Law of Contracts (Boston: Little, Brown, 1880)). This philosophy portrays law as an internally coherent and self-contained logical system - a "seamless web" of tightly linked principles, free from class interests and other social influences. Separating law from society, the legal formalist perspective emphasizes abstract doctrines and ahistorical rights, all of which are applied in a uniform, rational, and consistent manner by a neutral and autonomous judiciary. See Thomas Grey, "Langdell's Orthodoxy," 45 U. Pitt. L. Rev. 1 (1983); Anthony Kronman, The Lost Lawyer: Failing Ideals of the Legal Profession (Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap Press, 1993); see also Marc Galanter & David Trubek, "Scholars in Self-Estrangement: Some Reflections on the Crisis of Law and Development Studies in the United States," 1974 Wis. L. Rev. 1062.
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Trubek, D.2
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Stewart Macaulay, "Non-contractual Relations in Business: A Preliminary Study," 28 Am. Soc. Rev. 55 (1963). The businesses that Macaulay studied took pains to avoid or circumvent the formal restrictions of contracts and contract doctrine, generally preferring a "handshake agreement" backed by tacit community norms. Further, where formal contracts did exist and were breached, the contracting parties often eschewed lawsuits in favor of relationship-preserving extralegal adjustments to their original accords. While contract law was not entirely irrelevant, it served primarily to shape transactions at the margins, providing a formal backdrop and a communication device for informal legal arrangements.
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, vol.28
, pp. 55
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Stewart Macaulay, Law and the Balance of Power: The Automobile Manufacturers and Their Dealers (New York: Russell Sage Foundation, 1966). Both dealers and manufacturers regularly avoided resorting to the official administrative mechanism for deciding franchise disputes, instead developing a complex alternative process for resolving their grievances informally.
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(1966)
Law and the Balance of Power: The Automobile Manufacturers and Their Dealers
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Macaulay, S.1
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Selznick, Law, Society. Edelman, 97 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2), has recently elaborated this analysis, showing that organizations respond to the vague prescriptions of civil rights law by developing informal models of compliance, which courts then incorporate into formal rulings on what is required to satisfy the statutory mandate. We discuss this argument in greater detail below.
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Law, Society
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52
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Selznick, Law, Society. Edelman, 97 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2), has recently elaborated this analysis, showing that organizations respond to the vague prescriptions of civil rights law by developing informal models of compliance, which courts then incorporate into formal rulings on what is required to satisfy the statutory mandate. We discuss this argument in greater detail below.
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, vol.97
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See, e.g., Duncan Kennedy, "The Structure of Blackstone's Commentaries," 28 Buffalo L. Rev. 209 (1979); Gabel, 3 Res. L. & Soc. (cited in note 5); James Boyle, "The Politics of Reason: Critical Legal Theory and Local Social Thought," 133 U. Pa. L. Rev. 685 (1985); Gary Peller, "The Metaphysics of American Law," 73 Cal. L. Rev. 1151 (1985).
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, vol.28
, pp. 209
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See, e.g., Duncan Kennedy, "The Structure of Blackstone's Commentaries," 28 Buffalo L. Rev. 209 (1979); Gabel, 3 Res. L. & Soc. (cited in note 5); James Boyle, "The Politics of Reason: Critical Legal Theory and Local Social Thought," 133 U. Pa. L. Rev. 685 (1985); Gary Peller, "The Metaphysics of American Law," 73 Cal. L. Rev. 1151 (1985).
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, vol.3
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55
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See, e.g., Duncan Kennedy, "The Structure of Blackstone's Commentaries," 28 Buffalo L. Rev. 209 (1979); Gabel, 3 Res. L. & Soc. (cited in note 5); James Boyle, "The Politics of Reason: Critical Legal Theory and Local Social Thought," 133 U. Pa. L. Rev. 685 (1985); Gary Peller, "The Metaphysics of American Law," 73 Cal. L. Rev. 1151 (1985).
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, vol.133
, pp. 685
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Boyle, J.1
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See, e.g., Duncan Kennedy, "The Structure of Blackstone's Commentaries," 28 Buffalo L. Rev. 209 (1979); Gabel, 3 Res. L. & Soc. (cited in note 5); James Boyle, "The Politics of Reason: Critical Legal Theory and Local Social Thought," 133 U. Pa. L. Rev. 685 (1985); Gary Peller, "The Metaphysics of American Law," 73 Cal. L. Rev. 1151 (1985).
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, vol.73
, pp. 1151
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CLS can, itself, be accused of embracing an overly formalist view of law. The claim that law constitutes social thought patterns (and thus social relations) arguably takes law too seriously and ignores the reciprocal social construction of legal doctrine. Our own view is that CLS is useful because it points out the extent to which law, within any given social context, helps to constitute and reify social relations. However, this constitutive role of law must be understood in the context of the historically contingent institutional regimes that create legal meaning.
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Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall
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For surveys of organizational sociology, see W. Richard Scott, Organizations: Natural, Rational, and Open Systems (3d ed. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 1992); Gareth Morgan, Images of Organization (Newbury Park, Cal: Sage Publications, 1986). Early oganizational sociology was dominated by what Morgan refers to as "mechanistic" and "organic" models of organizational life. Researchers differed over whether organizations were best seen as rationally designed social tools (the mechanistic view) or as self-perpetuating natural entities (the organic view); however, most analysts agreed that organizational behavior reflected the concerted efforts of complex hierarchies to pursue objective, material goals - usually through controlled interactions among intraorganizational structural components, and (in some versions) through controlled exchanges with extraorganizational resource environments. Even the handful of conflict-theoretic "political" critiques emerging at the time generally accepted the basic premise that organizations could be understood as goal-driven resource-processing systems - albeit systems divided by factional struggles over who would set the goals and who would control the resources.
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(1992)
Organizations: Natural, Rational, and Open Systems 3d Ed.
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Scott, W.R.1
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59
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84936823916
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Newbury Park, Cal: Sage Publications
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For surveys of organizational sociology, see W. Richard Scott, Organizations: Natural, Rational, and Open Systems (3d ed. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 1992); Gareth Morgan, Images of Organization (Newbury Park, Cal: Sage Publications, 1986). Early oganizational sociology was dominated by what Morgan refers to as "mechanistic" and "organic" models of organizational life. Researchers differed over whether organizations were best seen as rationally designed social tools (the mechanistic view) or as self-perpetuating natural entities (the organic view); however, most analysts agreed that organizational behavior reflected the concerted efforts of complex hierarchies to pursue objective, material goals - usually through controlled interactions among intraorganizational structural components, and (in some versions) through controlled exchanges with extraorganizational resource environments. Even the handful of conflict-theoretic "political" critiques emerging at the time generally accepted the basic premise that organizations could be understood as goal-driven resource-processing systems - albeit systems divided by factional struggles over who would set the goals and who would control the resources.
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(1986)
Images of Organization
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Morgan, G.1
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60
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The Adolescence of Institutional Theory
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The approach that we refer to here as "cognitive institutionalism" has often been identified with an emphasis on "institutionalization as a process," while the approach that we designate "behavioral institutionalism" has often been associated with a focus on "institutionalization as a product"; see, e.g., W. Richard Scott, "The Adolescence of Institutional Theory," 32 Admin. Sci. Q. 493 (1987). This alternative terminology reflects the fact that the former camp associates institutionalized rule systems primarily with distinctive cognitive processes, while the latter associates them primarily with distinctive behavioral consequences.
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(1987)
Admin. Sci. Q.
, vol.32
, pp. 493
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Philip Selznick, "Foundations of the Theory of Organizations," 13 Am. Soc. Rev. 25-35 (1948); id., TVA and the Grass Roots (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1949) ("Selznick, TVA"); id., Leadership in Administration (Evanston, Ill.: Row, Peterson, 1957). For an overview of other works in this tradition, see Charles Perrow, Complex Organizations: A Critical Essay 157-77 (New York: Random House, 1986).
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Philip Selznick, "Foundations of the Theory of Organizations," 13 Am. Soc. Rev. 25-35 (1948); id., TVA and the Grass Roots (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1949) ("Selznick, TVA"); id., Leadership in Administration (Evanston, Ill.: Row, Peterson, 1957). For an overview of other works in this tradition, see Charles Perrow, Complex Organizations: A Critical Essay 157-77 (New York: Random House, 1986).
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(1949)
TVA and the Grass Roots
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Selznick, P.1
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63
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Philip Selznick, "Foundations of the Theory of Organizations," 13 Am. Soc. Rev. 25-35 (1948); id., TVA and the Grass Roots (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1949) ("Selznick, TVA"); id., Leadership in Administration (Evanston, Ill.: Row, Peterson, 1957). For an overview of other works in this tradition, see Charles Perrow, Complex Organizations: A Critical Essay 157-77 (New York: Random House, 1986).
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TVA
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Selznick1
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64
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Evanston, Ill.: Row, Peterson
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Philip Selznick, "Foundations of the Theory of Organizations," 13 Am. Soc. Rev. 25-35 (1948); id., TVA and the Grass Roots (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1949) ("Selznick, TVA"); id., Leadership in Administration (Evanston, Ill.: Row, Peterson, 1957). For an overview of other works in this tradition, see Charles Perrow, Complex Organizations: A Critical Essay 157-77 (New York: Random House, 1986).
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(1957)
Leadership in Administration
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Selznick, P.1
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65
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New York: Random House
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Philip Selznick, "Foundations of the Theory of Organizations," 13 Am. Soc. Rev. 25-35 (1948); id., TVA and the Grass Roots (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1949) ("Selznick, TVA"); id., Leadership in Administration (Evanston, Ill.: Row, Peterson, 1957). For an overview of other works in this tradition, see Charles Perrow, Complex Organizations: A Critical Essay 157-77 (New York: Random House, 1986).
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Complex Organizations: A Critical Essay
, pp. 157-177
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Perrow, C.1
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John W. Meyer & Brian Rowan, "Institutionalized Organizations: Formal Structure as Myth and Ceremony" (1977), and Lynne G. Zucker, "The Role of Institutionalization in Cultural Persistence" (1977), New Institutionalism. See also John W. Meyer, "The Effects of Education as an Institution," 83 Am. J. Soc. 55 (1977); id., "Institutionalization and the Rationality of Formal Organizational Structure," in John W. Meyer & W. Richard Scott, eds., Organizational Environments: Ritual and Rationality (Beverly Hills, Cal.: Sage Publications, 1983) ("Meyer & Scott, Organizational Environments"); Lynne G. Zucker, "Organizations as Institutions," in S. B. Bacharach, ed., Research in the Sociology of Organizations (Greenwich, CT: JAI Press, 1983); Tolbert & Zucker, 28 Admin. Sci. Q. (cited in note 7); Lynne G. Zucker, ed., Institutional Patterns and Organizations (Cambridge, Mass.: Ballinger, 1988).
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(1977)
Institutionalized Organizations: Formal Structure As Myth and Ceremony
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Meyer, J.W.1
Rowan, B.2
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71
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The Role of Institutionalization in Cultural Persistence
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John W. Meyer & Brian Rowan, "Institutionalized Organizations: Formal Structure as Myth and Ceremony" (1977), and Lynne G. Zucker, "The Role of Institutionalization in Cultural Persistence" (1977), New Institutionalism. See also John W. Meyer, "The Effects of Education as an Institution," 83 Am. J. Soc. 55 (1977); id., "Institutionalization and the Rationality of Formal Organizational Structure," in John W. Meyer & W. Richard Scott, eds., Organizational Environments: Ritual and Rationality (Beverly Hills, Cal.: Sage Publications, 1983) ("Meyer & Scott, Organizational Environments"); Lynne G. Zucker, "Organizations as Institutions," in S. B. Bacharach, ed., Research in the Sociology of Organizations (Greenwich, CT: JAI Press, 1983); Tolbert & Zucker, 28 Admin. Sci. Q. (cited in note 7); Lynne G. Zucker, ed., Institutional Patterns and Organizations (Cambridge, Mass.: Ballinger, 1988).
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(1977)
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Zucker, L.G.1
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72
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John W. Meyer & Brian Rowan, "Institutionalized Organizations: Formal Structure as Myth and Ceremony" (1977), and Lynne G. Zucker, "The Role of Institutionalization in Cultural Persistence" (1977), New Institutionalism. See also John W. Meyer, "The Effects of Education as an Institution," 83 Am. J. Soc. 55 (1977); id., "Institutionalization and the Rationality of Formal Organizational Structure," in John W. Meyer & W. Richard Scott, eds., Organizational Environments: Ritual and Rationality (Beverly Hills, Cal.: Sage Publications, 1983) ("Meyer & Scott, Organizational Environments"); Lynne G. Zucker, "Organizations as Institutions," in S. B. Bacharach, ed., Research in the Sociology of Organizations (Greenwich, CT: JAI Press, 1983); Tolbert & Zucker, 28 Admin. Sci. Q. (cited in note 7); Lynne G. Zucker, ed., Institutional Patterns and Organizations (Cambridge, Mass.: Ballinger, 1988).
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John W. Meyer & Brian Rowan, "Institutionalized Organizations: Formal Structure as Myth and Ceremony" (1977), and Lynne G. Zucker, "The Role of Institutionalization in Cultural Persistence" (1977), New Institutionalism. See also John W. Meyer, "The Effects of Education as an Institution," 83 Am. J. Soc. 55 (1977); id., "Institutionalization and the Rationality of Formal Organizational Structure," in John W. Meyer & W. Richard Scott, eds., Organizational Environments: Ritual and Rationality (Beverly Hills, Cal.: Sage Publications, 1983) ("Meyer & Scott, Organizational Environments"); Lynne G. Zucker, "Organizations as Institutions," in S. B. Bacharach, ed., Research in the Sociology of Organizations (Greenwich, CT: JAI Press, 1983); Tolbert & Zucker, 28 Admin. Sci. Q. (cited in note 7); Lynne G. Zucker, ed., Institutional Patterns and Organizations (Cambridge, Mass.: Ballinger, 1988).
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John W. Meyer & Brian Rowan, "Institutionalized Organizations: Formal Structure as Myth and Ceremony" (1977), and Lynne G. Zucker, "The Role of Institutionalization in Cultural Persistence" (1977), New Institutionalism. See also John W. Meyer, "The Effects of Education as an Institution," 83 Am. J. Soc. 55 (1977); id., "Institutionalization and the Rationality of Formal Organizational Structure," in John W. Meyer & W. Richard Scott, eds., Organizational Environments: Ritual and Rationality (Beverly Hills, Cal.: Sage Publications, 1983) ("Meyer & Scott, Organizational Environments"); Lynne G. Zucker, "Organizations as Institutions," in S. B. Bacharach, ed., Research in the Sociology of Organizations (Greenwich, CT: JAI Press, 1983); Tolbert & Zucker, 28 Admin. Sci. Q. (cited in note 7); Lynne G. Zucker, ed., Institutional Patterns and Organizations (Cambridge, Mass.: Ballinger, 1988).
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John W. Meyer & Brian Rowan, "Institutionalized Organizations: Formal Structure as Myth and Ceremony" (1977), and Lynne G. Zucker, "The Role of Institutionalization in Cultural Persistence" (1977), New Institutionalism. See also John W. Meyer, "The Effects of Education as an Institution," 83 Am. J. Soc. 55 (1977); id., "Institutionalization and the Rationality of Formal Organizational Structure," in John W. Meyer & W. Richard Scott, eds., Organizational Environments: Ritual and Rationality (Beverly Hills, Cal.: Sage Publications, 1983) ("Meyer & Scott, Organizational Environments"); Lynne G. Zucker, "Organizations as Institutions," in S. B. Bacharach, ed., Research in the Sociology of Organizations (Greenwich, CT: JAI Press, 1983); Tolbert & Zucker, 28 Admin. Sci. Q. (cited in note 7); Lynne G. Zucker, ed., Institutional Patterns and Organizations (Cambridge, Mass.: Ballinger, 1988).
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See, respectively, Paul J. DiMaggio, "Constructing an Organizational Field as a Professional Project: U.S. Art Museums, 1920-1940"; Joseph Galaskiewicz, "Making Corporate Actors Accountable: Institution-Building in Minneapolis-St. Paul"; Steven Brint & Jerome Karabel, "Institutional Origins and Transformations: The Case of American Community Colleges"; Neil Fligstein, "The Structural Transformation of American Industry: An Institutional Account of the Causes of Diversification in the Largest Firms, 1919-1979," New Instirutionalism. See also Steven Brint & Jerome Karabel, The Diverted Dream: Community Colleges and the Promise of Educational Opportunity in America, 1900-1985 (New York: Oxford University Press, 1989) ("Brint & Karabel, Diverted Dream"); Neil Fligstein, "The Spread of the Multidivisional Form among Large Firms, 1919-1979," 50 Am. Soc. Rev. 377 (1985).
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See, respectively, Paul J. DiMaggio, "Constructing an Organizational Field as a Professional Project: U.S. Art Museums, 1920-1940"; Joseph Galaskiewicz, "Making Corporate Actors Accountable: Institution-Building in Minneapolis-St. Paul"; Steven Brint & Jerome Karabel, "Institutional Origins and Transformations: The Case of American Community Colleges"; Neil Fligstein, "The Structural Transformation of American Industry: An Institutional Account of the Causes of Diversification in the Largest Firms, 1919-1979," New Instirutionalism. See also Steven Brint & Jerome Karabel, The Diverted Dream: Community Colleges and the Promise of Educational Opportunity in America, 1900-1985 (New York: Oxford University Press, 1989) ("Brint & Karabel, Diverted Dream"); Neil Fligstein, "The Spread of the Multidivisional Form among Large Firms, 1919-1979," 50 Am. Soc. Rev. 377 (1985).
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Making Corporate Actors Accountable: Institution-Building in Minneapolis-St. Paul
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See, respectively, Paul J. DiMaggio, "Constructing an Organizational Field as a Professional Project: U.S. Art Museums, 1920-1940"; Joseph Galaskiewicz, "Making Corporate Actors Accountable: Institution-Building in Minneapolis-St. Paul"; Steven Brint & Jerome Karabel, "Institutional Origins and Transformations: The Case of American Community Colleges"; Neil Fligstein, "The Structural Transformation of American Industry: An Institutional Account of the Causes of Diversification in the Largest Firms, 1919-1979," New Instirutionalism. See also Steven Brint & Jerome Karabel, The Diverted Dream: Community Colleges and the Promise of Educational Opportunity in America, 1900-1985 (New York: Oxford University Press, 1989) ("Brint & Karabel, Diverted Dream"); Neil Fligstein, "The Spread of the Multidivisional Form among Large Firms, 1919-1979," 50 Am. Soc. Rev. 377 (1985).
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See, respectively, Paul J. DiMaggio, "Constructing an Organizational Field as a Professional Project: U.S. Art Museums, 1920-1940"; Joseph Galaskiewicz, "Making Corporate Actors Accountable: Institution-Building in Minneapolis-St. Paul"; Steven Brint & Jerome Karabel, "Institutional Origins and Transformations: The Case of American Community Colleges"; Neil Fligstein, "The Structural Transformation of American Industry: An Institutional Account of the Causes of Diversification in the Largest Firms, 1919-1979," New Instirutionalism. See also Steven Brint & Jerome Karabel, The Diverted Dream: Community Colleges and the Promise of Educational Opportunity in America, 1900-1985 (New York: Oxford University Press, 1989) ("Brint & Karabel, Diverted Dream"); Neil Fligstein, "The Spread of the Multidivisional Form among Large Firms, 1919-1979," 50 Am. Soc. Rev. 377 (1985).
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See, respectively, Paul J. DiMaggio, "Constructing an Organizational Field as a Professional Project: U.S. Art Museums, 1920-1940"; Joseph Galaskiewicz, "Making Corporate Actors Accountable: Institution-Building in Minneapolis-St. Paul"; Steven Brint & Jerome Karabel, "Institutional Origins and Transformations: The Case of American Community Colleges"; Neil Fligstein, "The Structural Transformation of American Industry: An Institutional Account of the Causes of Diversification in the Largest Firms, 1919-1979," New Instirutionalism. See also Steven Brint & Jerome Karabel, The Diverted Dream: Community Colleges and the Promise of Educational Opportunity in America, 1900-1985 (New York: Oxford University Press, 1989) ("Brint & Karabel, Diverted Dream"); Neil Fligstein, "The Spread of the Multidivisional Form among Large Firms, 1919-1979," 50 Am. Soc. Rev. 377 (1985).
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The burgeoning literature on "procedural justice" (e.g., Tom R. Tyler & E. Allan Lind, The Social Psychology of Procedural Justice (New York: Plenum Press, 1988) ("Tyler & Lind, Social Psychology"), offers a telling example of how sociolegal studies might benefit from greater sensitivity to the constitutive aspects of the law. Although this research program has developed a substantial body of evidence regarding which sorts of legal procedures Americans consider most fair, it has given little attention to the possibility that these popular standards might, themselves, be socially constructed - and constituted, in part, by notions of due process embedded and embodied in the American legal system. Cf. Edelman, 95 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2); Ronald L. Jepperson & John W. Meyer, "The Public Order and the Construction of Formal Organizations," New Institutionalism.
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The burgeoning literature on "procedural justice" (e.g., Tom R. Tyler & E. Allan Lind, The Social Psychology of Procedural Justice (New York: Plenum Press, 1988) ("Tyler & Lind, Social Psychology"), offers a telling example of how sociolegal studies might benefit from greater sensitivity to the constitutive aspects of the law. Although this research program has developed a substantial body of evidence regarding which sorts of legal procedures Americans consider most fair, it has given little attention to the possibility that these popular standards might, themselves, be socially constructed - and constituted, in part, by notions of due process embedded and embodied in the American legal system. Cf. Edelman, 95 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2); Ronald L. Jepperson & John W. Meyer, "The Public Order and the Construction of Formal Organizations," New Institutionalism.
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The burgeoning literature on "procedural justice" (e.g., Tom R. Tyler & E. Allan Lind, The Social Psychology of Procedural Justice (New York: Plenum Press, 1988) ("Tyler & Lind, Social Psychology"), offers a telling example of how sociolegal studies might benefit from greater sensitivity to the constitutive aspects of the law. Although this research program has developed a substantial body of evidence regarding which sorts of legal procedures Americans consider most fair, it has given little attention to the possibility that these popular standards might, themselves, be socially constructed - and constituted, in part, by notions of due process embedded and embodied in the American legal system. Cf. Edelman, 95 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2); Ronald L. Jepperson & John W. Meyer, "The Public Order and the Construction of Formal Organizations," New Institutionalism.
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The burgeoning literature on "procedural justice" (e.g., Tom R. Tyler & E. Allan Lind, The Social Psychology of Procedural Justice (New York: Plenum Press, 1988) ("Tyler & Lind, Social Psychology"), offers a telling example of how sociolegal studies might benefit from greater sensitivity to the constitutive aspects of the law. Although this research program has developed a substantial body of evidence regarding which sorts of legal procedures Americans consider most fair, it has given little attention to the possibility that these popular standards might, themselves, be socially constructed - and constituted, in part, by notions of due process embedded and embodied in the American legal system. Cf. Edelman, 95 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2); Ronald L. Jepperson & John W. Meyer, "The Public Order and the Construction of Formal Organizations," New Institutionalism.
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Paul J. DiMaggio & Walter W. Powell, "Introduction," New Institutionalism 16 ff.; see also James G. March, "Decisions in Organizations and Theories of Choice," in A. H. Van de Van & W. F. Joyce, eds., Perspectives on Organization Design and Behavior (New York: Wiley, 1981) ("Van de Van & Joyce, Perspectives").
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Paul J. DiMaggio & Walter W. Powell, "Introduction," New Institutionalism 16 ff.; see also James G. March, "Decisions in Organizations and Theories of Choice," in A. H. Van de Van & W. F. Joyce, eds., Perspectives on Organization Design and Behavior (New York: Wiley, 1981) ("Van de Van & Joyce, Perspectives").
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Meyer & Rowan, "Institutionalized Organizations," New Institutionalism (cited in note 22); DiMaggio & Powell, "Iron Cage Revisited," New Institutionalism (cited in note 30).
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Meyer & Rowan, "Institutionalized Organizations," New Institutionalism (cited in note 22); DiMaggio & Powell, "Iron Cage Revisited," New Institutionalism (cited in note 30).
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Friedland &. Alford, "Bringing Society Back In," New Institutionalism; see also Frank R. Dobbin, "The Origins of Economic Principles: Entrepreneurs and Public Policy in 19th Century America," in W. Richard Scott & Søren Christensen, The Institutional Construction of Organizations (Newbury Park, Cal.: Sage Publications, 1995) ("Scott & Christensen, Institutional Construction"); Suchman, "On Advice of Counsel" (cited in note 3); Lauren B. Edelman, Christopher Uggen, & Howard S. Erlanger, "The Endogeneity of Legal Regulation: Grievance Procedures as Rational Myth" (presented at Law & Society Association annual meeting, Toronto, 1995) ("Edelman et al., 'Endogeneity'").
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Friedland &. Alford, "Bringing Society Back In," New Institutionalism; see also Frank R. Dobbin, "The Origins of Economic Principles: Entrepreneurs and Public Policy in 19th Century America," in W. Richard Scott & Søren Christensen, The Institutional Construction of Organizations (Newbury Park, Cal.: Sage Publications, 1995) ("Scott & Christensen, Institutional Construction"); Suchman, "On Advice of Counsel" (cited in note 3); Lauren B. Edelman, Christopher Uggen, & Howard S. Erlanger, "The Endogeneity of Legal Regulation: Grievance Procedures as Rational Myth" (presented at Law & Society Association annual meeting, Toronto, 1995) ("Edelman et al., 'Endogeneity'").
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-
-
Friedland &. Alford, "Bringing Society Back In," New Institutionalism; see also Frank R. Dobbin, "The Origins of Economic Principles: Entrepreneurs and Public Policy in 19th Century America," in W. Richard Scott & Søren Christensen, The Institutional Construction of Organizations (Newbury Park, Cal.: Sage Publications, 1995) ("Scott & Christensen, Institutional Construction"); Suchman, "On Advice of Counsel" (cited in note 3); Lauren B. Edelman, Christopher Uggen, & Howard S. Erlanger, "The Endogeneity of Legal Regulation: Grievance Procedures as Rational Myth" (presented at Law & Society Association annual meeting, Toronto, 1995) ("Edelman et al., 'Endogeneity'").
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Institutional Construction
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-
Scott1
Christensen2
-
119
-
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85033014713
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-
cited in note 3
-
Friedland &. Alford, "Bringing Society Back In," New Institutionalism; see also Frank R. Dobbin, "The Origins of Economic Principles: Entrepreneurs and Public Policy in 19th Century America," in W. Richard Scott & Søren Christensen, The Institutional Construction of Organizations (Newbury Park, Cal.: Sage Publications, 1995) ("Scott & Christensen, Institutional Construction"); Suchman, "On Advice of Counsel" (cited in note 3); Lauren B. Edelman, Christopher Uggen, & Howard S. Erlanger, "The Endogeneity of Legal Regulation: Grievance Procedures as Rational Myth" (presented at Law & Society Association annual meeting, Toronto, 1995) ("Edelman et al., 'Endogeneity'").
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On Advice of Counsel
-
-
Suchman1
-
120
-
-
85033001329
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The Endogeneity of Legal Regulation: Grievance Procedures as Rational Myth
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Toronto
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Friedland &. Alford, "Bringing Society Back In," New Institutionalism; see also Frank R. Dobbin, "The Origins of Economic Principles: Entrepreneurs and Public Policy in 19th Century America," in W. Richard Scott & Søren Christensen, The Institutional Construction of Organizations (Newbury Park, Cal.: Sage Publications, 1995) ("Scott & Christensen, Institutional Construction"); Suchman, "On Advice of Counsel" (cited in note 3); Lauren B. Edelman, Christopher Uggen, & Howard S. Erlanger, "The Endogeneity of Legal Regulation: Grievance Procedures as Rational Myth" (presented at Law & Society Association annual meeting, Toronto, 1995) ("Edelman et al., 'Endogeneity'").
-
(1995)
Law & Society Association Annual Meeting
-
-
Edelman, L.B.1
Uggen, C.2
Erlanger, H.S.3
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121
-
-
85033032048
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-
Friedland &. Alford, "Bringing Society Back In," New Institutionalism; see also Frank R. Dobbin, "The Origins of Economic Principles: Entrepreneurs and Public Policy in 19th Century America," in W. Richard Scott & Søren Christensen, The Institutional Construction of Organizations (Newbury Park, Cal.: Sage Publications, 1995) ("Scott & Christensen, Institutional Construction"); Suchman, "On Advice of Counsel" (cited in note 3); Lauren B. Edelman, Christopher Uggen, & Howard S. Erlanger, "The Endogeneity of Legal Regulation: Grievance Procedures as Rational Myth" (presented at Law & Society Association annual meeting, Toronto, 1995) ("Edelman et al., 'Endogeneity'").
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Endogeneity
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Edelman1
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122
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85033027226
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Role of Institutionalization
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cited in note 22
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Zucker, "Role of Institutionalization," New Institutionalism (cited in note 22). See also Meyer & Rowan, "Institutionalized Organizations," New Institutionalism (cited in note 22); Friedland & Alford, "Bringing Society Back In," New Institutionalism (cited in note 37).
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New Institutionalism
-
-
Zucker1
-
123
-
-
85033000219
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Institutionalized Organizations
-
cited in note 22
-
Zucker, "Role of Institutionalization," New Institutionalism (cited in note 22). See also Meyer & Rowan, "Institutionalized Organizations," New Institutionalism (cited in note 22); Friedland & Alford, "Bringing Society Back In," New Institutionalism (cited in note 37).
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New Institutionalism
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-
Meyer1
Rowan2
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124
-
-
85033030887
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Bringing Society Back in
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cited in note 37
-
Zucker, "Role of Institutionalization," New Institutionalism (cited in note 22). See also Meyer & Rowan, "Institutionalized Organizations," New Institutionalism (cited in note 22); Friedland & Alford, "Bringing Society Back In," New Institutionalism (cited in note 37).
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New Institutionalism
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-
Friedland1
Alford2
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125
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85033000219
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Institutionalized Organizations
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Meyer and Rowan refer to this meaning-preserving collusion as embodying a "logic of confidence" - a double-entendre evoking both "public confidence" and the "confidence game." Meyer & Rowan, "Institutionalized Organizations," New Institutionalism.
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New Institutionalism
-
-
Meyer1
Rowan2
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126
-
-
85032997930
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-
cited in note 2
-
The relevance of Institutionalism to sociolegal work on organizations is evident in the fact that virtually all recent students of law and organizations draw heavily on this tradition. See, e.g., Dobbin et al., "Expansion of Due Process" (cited in note 2); Edelman, 95 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2); Creighton, "Emergence" (cited in note 3); Edelman, 97 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2); Dobbin et al., 99 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 6); Suchman, "On Advice of Counsel."
-
Expansion of Due Process
-
-
Dobbin1
-
127
-
-
85032999874
-
-
cited in note 2
-
The relevance of Institutionalism to sociolegal work on organizations is evident in the fact that virtually all recent students of law and organizations draw heavily on this tradition. See, e.g., Dobbin et al., "Expansion of Due Process" (cited in note 2); Edelman, 95 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2); Creighton, "Emergence" (cited in note 3); Edelman, 97 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2); Dobbin et al., 99 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 6); Suchman, "On Advice of Counsel."
-
Am. J. Soc.
, vol.95
-
-
Edelman1
-
128
-
-
85033008650
-
-
cited in note 3
-
The relevance of Institutionalism to sociolegal work on organizations is evident in the fact that virtually all recent students of law and organizations draw heavily on this tradition. See, e.g., Dobbin et al., "Expansion of Due Process" (cited in note 2); Edelman, 95 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2); Creighton, "Emergence" (cited in note 3); Edelman, 97 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2); Dobbin et al., 99 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 6); Suchman, "On Advice of Counsel."
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Emergence
-
-
Creighton1
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129
-
-
85032998967
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-
cited in note 2
-
The relevance of Institutionalism to sociolegal work on organizations is evident in the fact that virtually all recent students of law and organizations draw heavily on this tradition. See, e.g., Dobbin et al., "Expansion of Due Process" (cited in note 2); Edelman, 95 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2); Creighton, "Emergence" (cited in note 3); Edelman, 97 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2); Dobbin et al., 99 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 6); Suchman, "On Advice of Counsel."
-
Am. J. Soc.
, vol.97
-
-
Edelman1
-
130
-
-
85033029079
-
-
cited in note 6
-
The relevance of Institutionalism to sociolegal work on organizations is evident in the fact that virtually all recent students of law and organizations draw heavily on this tradition. See, e.g., Dobbin et al., "Expansion of Due Process" (cited in note 2); Edelman, 95 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2); Creighton, "Emergence" (cited in note 3); Edelman, 97 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2); Dobbin et al., 99 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 6); Suchman, "On Advice of Counsel."
-
Am. J. Soc.
, vol.99
-
-
Dobbin1
-
131
-
-
85033014713
-
-
The relevance of Institutionalism to sociolegal work on organizations is evident in the fact that virtually all recent students of law and organizations draw heavily on this tradition. See, e.g., Dobbin et al., "Expansion of Due Process" (cited in note 2); Edelman, 95 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2); Creighton, "Emergence" (cited in note 3); Edelman, 97 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2); Dobbin et al., 99 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 6); Suchman, "On Advice of Counsel."
-
On Advice of Counsel
-
-
Suchman1
-
134
-
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84965855157
-
-
Christopher Stone, Where the Law Ends: The Social Control of Corporate Behavior (New York: Harper & Row, 1975) ("Stone, Where the Law Ends").
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Where the Law Ends
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-
Stone1
-
135
-
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84965855157
-
-
Stone, for example, shows how organizational structure encourages inattention to legal requirements; Vaughan argues that organizational structure encourages individuals within organizations to place organizational goals above legal requirements; and Burk contends that individuals in organizations use legal requirements to advance other, extralegal interests. Stone and Vaughan show how attributes of bureaucracy such as task specialization, decentralized decision making, and interdivisional competition are conducive to noncompliance. In addition, Katz points out that officials within organizations often mask violations from outside review. Stone, Where the Law Ends; Diane Vaughan, Controlling Unlawful Organizational Behavior: Social Structure and Corporate Misconduct (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1983); James Burk, Values in the Marketplace: The American Stock Market Under Federal Securities Law (New York: Walter de Gruyer, 1988); Jack Katz, "Cover-Up and Collective Integrity: On the Natural Antagonism of Authority Internal and External to Organizations," 25 Soc. Prob. 3 (1977). See also Frederick Wirt, The Politics of Southern Equality: Law and Social Change in a Mississippi County (Chicago: Aldine, 1970); Colin S. Diver, "The Judge as Political Powerbroker: Superintending Structural Change in Public Institutions," 65 Va. L. Rev. 43 (1979); William H. Clune, "A Political Model of Implementation and the Implications of the Model for Public Policy, Research, and the Changing Role of Lawyers," 69 Iowa L. Rev. 47 (1983); Keith Hawkins, Environment and Enforcement (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1984) ("Hawkins, Environment and Enforcement"); Blumrosen, Modern Law (cited in note 1).
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Where the Law Ends
-
-
Stone1
-
136
-
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0003544072
-
-
Chicago: University of Chicago Press
-
Stone, for example, shows how organizational structure encourages inattention to legal requirements; Vaughan argues that organizational structure encourages individuals within organizations to place organizational goals above legal requirements; and Burk contends that individuals in organizations use legal requirements to advance other, extralegal interests. Stone and Vaughan show how attributes of bureaucracy such as task specialization, decentralized decision making, and interdivisional competition are conducive to noncompliance. In addition, Katz points out that officials within organizations often mask violations from outside review. Stone, Where the Law Ends; Diane Vaughan, Controlling Unlawful Organizational Behavior: Social Structure and Corporate Misconduct (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1983); James Burk, Values in the Marketplace: The American Stock Market Under Federal Securities Law (New York: Walter de Gruyer, 1988); Jack Katz, "Cover-Up and Collective Integrity: On the Natural Antagonism of Authority Internal and External to Organizations," 25 Soc. Prob. 3 (1977). See also Frederick Wirt, The Politics of Southern Equality: Law and Social Change in a Mississippi County (Chicago: Aldine, 1970); Colin S. Diver, "The Judge as Political Powerbroker: Superintending Structural Change in Public Institutions," 65 Va. L. Rev. 43 (1979); William H. Clune, "A Political Model of Implementation and the Implications of the Model for Public Policy, Research, and the Changing Role of Lawyers," 69 Iowa L. Rev. 47 (1983); Keith Hawkins, Environment and Enforcement (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1984) ("Hawkins, Environment and Enforcement"); Blumrosen, Modern Law (cited in note 1).
-
(1983)
Controlling Unlawful Organizational Behavior: Social Structure and Corporate Misconduct
-
-
Vaughan, D.1
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137
-
-
0003958560
-
-
New York: Walter de Gruyer
-
Stone, for example, shows how organizational structure encourages inattention to legal requirements; Vaughan argues that organizational structure encourages individuals within organizations to place organizational goals above legal requirements; and Burk contends that individuals in organizations use legal requirements to advance other, extralegal interests. Stone and Vaughan show how attributes of bureaucracy such as task specialization, decentralized decision making, and interdivisional competition are conducive to noncompliance. In addition, Katz points out that officials within organizations often mask violations from outside review. Stone, Where the Law Ends; Diane Vaughan, Controlling Unlawful Organizational Behavior: Social Structure and Corporate Misconduct (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1983); James Burk, Values in the Marketplace: The American Stock Market Under Federal Securities Law (New York: Walter de Gruyer, 1988); Jack Katz, "Cover-Up and Collective Integrity: On the Natural Antagonism of Authority Internal and External to Organizations," 25 Soc. Prob. 3 (1977). See also Frederick Wirt, The Politics of Southern Equality: Law and Social Change in a Mississippi County (Chicago: Aldine, 1970); Colin S. Diver, "The Judge as Political Powerbroker: Superintending Structural Change in Public Institutions," 65 Va. L. Rev. 43 (1979); William H. Clune, "A Political Model of Implementation and the Implications of the Model for Public Policy, Research, and the Changing Role of Lawyers," 69 Iowa L. Rev. 47 (1983); Keith Hawkins, Environment and Enforcement (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1984) ("Hawkins, Environment and Enforcement"); Blumrosen, Modern Law (cited in note 1).
-
(1988)
Values in the Marketplace: The American Stock Market under Federal Securities Law
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Burk, J.1
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138
-
-
84925906270
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Cover-Up and Collective Integrity: On the Natural Antagonism of Authority Internal and External to Organizations
-
Stone, for example, shows how organizational structure encourages inattention to legal requirements; Vaughan argues that organizational structure encourages individuals within organizations to place organizational goals above legal requirements; and Burk contends that individuals in organizations use legal requirements to advance other, extralegal interests. Stone and Vaughan show how attributes of bureaucracy such as task specialization, decentralized decision making, and interdivisional competition are conducive to noncompliance. In addition, Katz points out that officials within organizations often mask violations from outside review. Stone, Where the Law Ends; Diane Vaughan, Controlling Unlawful Organizational Behavior: Social Structure and Corporate Misconduct (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1983); James Burk, Values in the Marketplace: The American Stock Market Under Federal Securities Law (New York: Walter de Gruyer, 1988); Jack Katz, "Cover-Up and Collective Integrity: On the Natural Antagonism of Authority Internal and External to Organizations," 25 Soc. Prob. 3 (1977). See also Frederick Wirt, The Politics of Southern Equality: Law and Social Change in a Mississippi County (Chicago: Aldine, 1970); Colin S. Diver, "The Judge as Political Powerbroker: Superintending Structural Change in Public Institutions," 65 Va. L. Rev. 43 (1979); William H. Clune, "A Political Model of Implementation and the Implications of the Model for Public Policy, Research, and the Changing Role of Lawyers," 69 Iowa L. Rev. 47 (1983); Keith Hawkins, Environment and Enforcement (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1984) ("Hawkins, Environment and Enforcement"); Blumrosen, Modern Law (cited in note 1).
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(1977)
Soc. Prob.
, vol.25
, pp. 3
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-
Katz, J.1
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139
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0009947211
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-
Chicago: Aldine
-
Stone, for example, shows how organizational structure encourages inattention to legal requirements; Vaughan argues that organizational structure encourages individuals within organizations to place organizational goals above legal requirements; and Burk contends that individuals in organizations use legal requirements to advance other, extralegal interests. Stone and Vaughan show how attributes of bureaucracy such as task specialization, decentralized decision making, and interdivisional competition are conducive to noncompliance. In addition, Katz points out that officials within organizations often mask violations from outside review. Stone, Where the Law Ends; Diane Vaughan, Controlling Unlawful Organizational Behavior: Social Structure and Corporate Misconduct (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1983); James Burk, Values in the Marketplace: The American Stock Market Under Federal Securities Law (New York: Walter de Gruyer, 1988); Jack Katz, "Cover-Up and Collective Integrity: On the Natural Antagonism of Authority Internal and External to Organizations," 25 Soc. Prob. 3 (1977). See also Frederick Wirt, The Politics of Southern Equality: Law and Social Change in a Mississippi County (Chicago: Aldine, 1970); Colin S. Diver, "The Judge as Political Powerbroker: Superintending Structural Change in Public Institutions," 65 Va. L. Rev. 43 (1979); William H. Clune, "A Political Model of Implementation and the Implications of the Model for Public Policy, Research, and the Changing Role of Lawyers," 69 Iowa L. Rev. 47 (1983); Keith Hawkins, Environment and Enforcement (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1984) ("Hawkins, Environment and Enforcement"); Blumrosen, Modern Law (cited in note 1).
-
(1970)
The Politics of Southern Equality: Law and Social Change in a Mississippi County
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-
Wirt, F.1
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140
-
-
0008883096
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The Judge as Political Powerbroker: Superintending Structural Change in Public Institutions
-
Stone, for example, shows how organizational structure encourages inattention to legal requirements; Vaughan argues that organizational structure encourages individuals within organizations to place organizational goals above legal requirements; and Burk contends that individuals in organizations use legal requirements to advance other, extralegal interests. Stone and Vaughan show how attributes of bureaucracy such as task specialization, decentralized decision making, and interdivisional competition are conducive to noncompliance. In addition, Katz points out that officials within organizations often mask violations from outside review. Stone, Where the Law Ends; Diane Vaughan, Controlling Unlawful Organizational Behavior: Social Structure and Corporate Misconduct (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1983); James Burk, Values in the Marketplace: The American Stock Market Under Federal Securities Law (New York: Walter de Gruyer, 1988); Jack Katz, "Cover-Up and Collective Integrity: On the Natural Antagonism of Authority Internal and External to Organizations," 25 Soc. Prob. 3 (1977). See also Frederick Wirt, The Politics of Southern Equality: Law and Social Change in a Mississippi County (Chicago: Aldine, 1970); Colin S. Diver, "The Judge as Political Powerbroker: Superintending Structural Change in Public Institutions," 65 Va. L. Rev. 43 (1979); William H. Clune, "A Political Model of Implementation and the Implications of the Model for Public Policy, Research, and the Changing Role of Lawyers," 69 Iowa L. Rev. 47 (1983); Keith Hawkins, Environment and Enforcement (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1984) ("Hawkins, Environment and Enforcement"); Blumrosen, Modern Law (cited in note 1).
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(1979)
Va. L. Rev.
, vol.65
, pp. 43
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Diver, C.S.1
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141
-
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1842652232
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A Political Model of Implementation and the Implications of the Model for Public Policy, Research, and the Changing Role of Lawyers
-
Stone, for example, shows how organizational structure encourages inattention to legal requirements; Vaughan argues that organizational structure encourages individuals within organizations to place organizational goals above legal requirements; and Burk contends that individuals in organizations use legal requirements to advance other, extralegal interests. Stone and Vaughan show how attributes of bureaucracy such as task specialization, decentralized decision making, and interdivisional competition are conducive to noncompliance. In addition, Katz points out that officials within organizations often mask violations from outside review. Stone, Where the Law Ends; Diane Vaughan, Controlling Unlawful Organizational Behavior: Social Structure and Corporate Misconduct (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1983); James Burk, Values in the Marketplace: The American Stock Market Under Federal Securities Law (New York: Walter de Gruyer, 1988); Jack Katz, "Cover-Up and Collective Integrity: On the Natural Antagonism of Authority Internal and External to Organizations," 25 Soc. Prob. 3 (1977). See also Frederick Wirt, The Politics of Southern Equality: Law and Social Change in a Mississippi County (Chicago: Aldine, 1970); Colin S. Diver, "The Judge as Political Powerbroker: Superintending Structural Change in Public Institutions," 65 Va. L. Rev. 43 (1979); William H. Clune, "A Political Model of Implementation and the Implications of the Model for Public Policy, Research, and the Changing Role of Lawyers," 69 Iowa L. Rev. 47 (1983); Keith Hawkins, Environment and Enforcement (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1984) ("Hawkins, Environment and Enforcement"); Blumrosen, Modern Law (cited in note 1).
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(1983)
Iowa L. Rev.
, vol.69
, pp. 47
-
-
Clune, W.H.1
-
142
-
-
0003735149
-
-
Oxford: Clarendon Press
-
Stone, for example, shows how organizational structure encourages inattention to legal requirements; Vaughan argues that organizational structure encourages individuals within organizations to place organizational goals above legal requirements; and Burk contends that individuals in organizations use legal requirements to advance other, extralegal interests. Stone and Vaughan show how attributes of bureaucracy such as task specialization, decentralized decision making, and interdivisional competition are conducive to noncompliance. In addition, Katz points out that officials within organizations often mask violations from outside review. Stone, Where the Law Ends; Diane Vaughan, Controlling Unlawful Organizational Behavior: Social Structure and Corporate Misconduct (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1983); James Burk, Values in the Marketplace: The American Stock Market Under Federal Securities Law (New York: Walter de Gruyer, 1988); Jack Katz, "Cover-Up and Collective Integrity: On the Natural Antagonism of Authority Internal and External to Organizations," 25 Soc. Prob. 3 (1977). See also Frederick Wirt, The Politics of Southern Equality: Law and Social Change in a Mississippi County (Chicago: Aldine, 1970); Colin S. Diver, "The Judge as Political Powerbroker: Superintending Structural Change in Public Institutions," 65 Va. L. Rev. 43 (1979); William H. Clune, "A Political Model of Implementation and the Implications of the Model for Public Policy, Research, and the Changing Role of Lawyers," 69 Iowa L. Rev. 47 (1983); Keith Hawkins, Environment and Enforcement (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1984) ("Hawkins, Environment and Enforcement"); Blumrosen, Modern Law (cited in note 1).
-
(1984)
Environment and Enforcement
-
-
Hawkins, K.1
-
143
-
-
0003735149
-
-
Stone, for example, shows how organizational structure encourages inattention to legal requirements; Vaughan argues that organizational structure encourages individuals within organizations to place organizational goals above legal requirements; and Burk contends that individuals in organizations use legal requirements to advance other, extralegal interests. Stone and Vaughan show how attributes of bureaucracy such as task specialization, decentralized decision making, and interdivisional competition are conducive to noncompliance. In addition, Katz points out that officials within organizations often mask violations from outside review. Stone, Where the Law Ends; Diane Vaughan, Controlling Unlawful Organizational Behavior: Social Structure and Corporate Misconduct (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1983); James Burk, Values in the Marketplace: The American Stock Market Under Federal Securities Law (New York: Walter de Gruyer, 1988); Jack Katz, "Cover-Up and Collective Integrity: On the Natural Antagonism of Authority Internal and External to Organizations," 25 Soc. Prob. 3 (1977). See also Frederick Wirt, The Politics of Southern Equality: Law and Social Change in a Mississippi County (Chicago: Aldine, 1970); Colin S. Diver, "The Judge as Political Powerbroker: Superintending Structural Change in Public Institutions," 65 Va. L. Rev. 43 (1979); William H. Clune, "A Political Model of Implementation and the Implications of the Model for Public Policy, Research, and the Changing Role of Lawyers," 69 Iowa L. Rev. 47 (1983); Keith Hawkins, Environment and Enforcement (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1984) ("Hawkins, Environment and Enforcement"); Blumrosen, Modern Law (cited in note 1).
-
Environment and Enforcement
-
-
Hawkins1
-
144
-
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84883987349
-
-
cited in note 1
-
Stone, for example, shows how organizational structure encourages inattention to legal requirements; Vaughan argues that organizational structure encourages individuals within organizations to place organizational goals above legal requirements; and Burk contends that individuals in organizations use legal requirements to advance other, extralegal interests. Stone and Vaughan show how attributes of bureaucracy such as task specialization, decentralized decision making, and interdivisional competition are conducive to noncompliance. In addition, Katz points out that officials within organizations often mask violations from outside review. Stone, Where the Law Ends; Diane Vaughan, Controlling Unlawful Organizational Behavior: Social Structure and Corporate Misconduct (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1983); James Burk, Values in the Marketplace: The American Stock Market Under Federal Securities Law (New York: Walter de Gruyer, 1988); Jack Katz, "Cover-Up and Collective Integrity: On the Natural Antagonism of Authority Internal and External to Organizations," 25 Soc. Prob. 3 (1977). See also Frederick Wirt, The Politics of Southern Equality: Law and Social Change in a Mississippi County (Chicago: Aldine, 1970); Colin S. Diver, "The Judge as Political Powerbroker: Superintending Structural Change in Public Institutions," 65 Va. L. Rev. 43 (1979); William H. Clune, "A Political Model of Implementation and the Implications of the Model for Public Policy, Research, and the Changing Role of Lawyers," 69 Iowa L. Rev. 47 (1983); Keith Hawkins, Environment and Enforcement (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1984) ("Hawkins, Environment and Enforcement"); Blumrosen, Modern Law (cited in note 1).
-
Modern Law
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-
Blumrosen1
-
145
-
-
0003719148
-
-
Chicago: University of Chicago Press
-
The Law and Society literature is replete with cases in which legal "controls" on organizational behavior consist almost entirely of broad and ambiguous mandates, with little "plain meaning." Usually, this is no accident: Statutory ambiguity results largely from corporate lobbying, which tends to dilute strong legislative language. For similar reasons, laws targeted toward organizations tend to address procedure more than substance, to have weak and poorly funded enforcement mechanisms, and to provide little feedback on what constitutes compliance. See, e.g., Paul Burstein, Discrimination, Jobs, and Politics: The Struggle for Equal Employment Opportunity in the United States since the New Deal (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1988); Edelman, 97 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2).
-
(1988)
Discrimination, Jobs, and Politics: The Struggle for Equal Employment Opportunity in the United States since the New Deal
-
-
Burstein, P.1
-
146
-
-
85032997419
-
-
cited in note 2
-
The Law and Society literature is replete with cases in which legal "controls" on organizational behavior consist almost entirely of broad and ambiguous mandates, with little "plain meaning." Usually, this is no accident: Statutory ambiguity results largely from corporate lobbying, which tends to dilute strong legislative language. For similar reasons, laws targeted toward organizations tend to address procedure more than substance, to have weak and poorly funded enforcement mechanisms, and to provide little feedback on what constitutes compliance. See, e.g., Paul Burstein, Discrimination, Jobs, and Politics: The Struggle for Equal Employment Opportunity in the United States since the New Deal (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1988); Edelman, 97 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2).
-
Am. J. Soc.
, vol.97
-
-
Edelman1
-
147
-
-
85033000219
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Institutionalized Organizations
-
Meyer & Rowan, "Institutionalized Organizations," New Institutionalism; DiMaggio & Powell, "Iron Cage Revisited," New Institutionalism (cited in note 30); Richard Scott & John W. Meyer, "The Organization of Societal Sectors: Propositions and Early Evidence" (1983) New Institutionalism.
-
New Institutionalism
-
-
Meyer1
Rowan2
-
148
-
-
0002351758
-
Iron Cage Revisited
-
cited in note 30
-
Meyer & Rowan, "Institutionalized Organizations," New Institutionalism; DiMaggio & Powell, "Iron Cage Revisited," New Institutionalism (cited in note 30); Richard Scott & John W. Meyer, "The Organization of Societal Sectors: Propositions and Early Evidence" (1983) New Institutionalism.
-
New Institutionalism
-
-
DiMaggio1
Powell2
-
149
-
-
0003057459
-
The Organization of Societal Sectors: Propositions and Early Evidence
-
Meyer & Rowan, "Institutionalized Organizations," New Institutionalism; DiMaggio & Powell, "Iron Cage Revisited," New Institutionalism (cited in note 30); Richard Scott & John W. Meyer, "The Organization of Societal Sectors: Propositions and Early Evidence" (1983) New Institutionalism.
-
(1983)
New Institutionalism
-
-
Scott, R.1
Meyer, J.W.2
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151
-
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85033007825
-
-
note
-
In our discussion of how Law and Society work may inform the New Institutionalism (below), we challenge the common institutionalist assumption that legal mandates operate primarily through coercion.
-
-
-
-
153
-
-
85032997930
-
-
cited in note 2
-
For examples of this approach, see Dobbin et al., "Expansion of Due Process" (cited in note 2); Edelman, 95 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2); id., 97 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2); Abzug & Mezias, 4 Organization Sci.; Heimer, "Explaining Variation" (cited in note 6).
-
Expansion of Due Process
-
-
Dobbin1
-
154
-
-
85033018127
-
-
cited in note 2
-
For examples of this approach, see Dobbin et al., "Expansion of Due Process" (cited in note 2); Edelman, 95 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2); id., 97 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2); Abzug & Mezias, 4 Organization Sci.; Heimer, "Explaining Variation" (cited in note 6).
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Am. J. Soc.
, vol.95
-
-
Edelman1
-
155
-
-
85033022052
-
-
cited in note 2
-
For examples of this approach, see Dobbin et al., "Expansion of Due Process" (cited in note 2); Edelman, 95 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2); id., 97 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2); Abzug & Mezias, 4 Organization Sci.; Heimer, "Explaining Variation" (cited in note 6).
-
Am. J. Soc.
, vol.97
-
-
Edelman1
-
156
-
-
85033016680
-
-
For examples of this approach, see Dobbin et al., "Expansion of Due Process" (cited in note 2); Edelman, 95 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2); id., 97 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2); Abzug & Mezias, 4 Organization Sci.; Heimer, "Explaining Variation" (cited in note 6).
-
Organization Sci.
, vol.4
-
-
Abzug1
Mezias2
-
157
-
-
85033027317
-
-
cited in note 6
-
For examples of this approach, see Dobbin et al., "Expansion of Due Process" (cited in note 2); Edelman, 95 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2); id., 97 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2); Abzug & Mezias, 4 Organization Sci.; Heimer, "Explaining Variation" (cited in note 6).
-
Explaining Variation
-
-
Heimer1
-
159
-
-
85033030887
-
Bringing Society Back in
-
cited in note 37
-
See Friedland & Alford, "Bringing Society Back In," New Institutionalism (cited in note 37); see also Edelman, 97 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2).
-
New Institutionalism
-
-
Friedland1
Alford2
-
160
-
-
85033029243
-
-
cited in note 2
-
See Friedland & Alford, "Bringing Society Back In," New Institutionalism (cited in note 37); see also Edelman, 97 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2).
-
Am. J. Soc.
, vol.97
-
-
Edelman1
-
161
-
-
85033000219
-
Institutionalized Organizations
-
cited in note 22
-
Meyer & Rowan, "Institutionalized Organizations," New Institutionalism 58 ff. (cited in note 22).
-
New Institutionalism
-
-
Meyer1
Rowan2
-
162
-
-
85033007313
-
-
cited in note 2
-
See, e.g., Edelman, 97 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2).
-
Am. J. Soc.
, vol.97
-
-
Edelman1
-
164
-
-
0002351758
-
Iron Cage Revisited
-
cited in note 30
-
DiMaggio & Powell, "Iron Cage Revisited," New Institutionalism (cited in note 30); cf. Anthony Giddens, Central Problems in Social Theory: Action, Structure, and Contradiction in Social Analysis (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1979).
-
New Institutionalism
-
-
DiMaggio1
Powell2
-
166
-
-
84925981002
-
Transaction Systems and Unlawful Organizational Behavior
-
See, e.g., Diane Vaughan. "Transaction Systems and Unlawful Organizational Behavior," 29 Soc. Prob. 373 (1982).
-
(1982)
Soc. Prob.
, vol.29
, pp. 373
-
-
Vaughan, D.1
-
168
-
-
0002351758
-
Iron Cage Revisited
-
Ironically, the New Institutionalism suggests that the more uncertain the law is, the more intense such sense-making activity will be. See, e.g., DiMaggio & Powell, "Iron Cage Revisited," New Institutionalism 77 ("The greater the extent to which technologies are uncertainty or goals are ambiguous withing a field, the greater the rate of isomorphic change").
-
New Institutionalism
, pp. 77
-
-
DiMaggio1
Powell2
-
169
-
-
85033001675
-
-
cited in note 2
-
There is considerable empirical support for the New Institutionalist version of organizational compliance with law. Analyses of the diffusion of various responses to law often show that the rate of adoption is proportionate to the prevalence of such structures in the population, which supports the notion of normative isomorphism. Edelman, 95 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2); id., 97 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2); John R. Sutton, Frank R. Dobbin, John W. Meyer, & W. Richard Scott "Legalization of the Workplace," 99 Am. J. Soc. 944 (1994). Further, Edelman, Uggen, and Erlanger find that while employers adopt discrimination grievance procedures in the belief that such procedures will reduce the likelihood of litigation, there is little objective evidence to validate this belief. The personnel and legal professions, however, have actively promulgated this unsubstantiated assumption. Edelman et al., "Endogeneity" (cited in note 43).
-
Am. J. Soc.
, vol.95
-
-
Edelman1
-
170
-
-
85033029194
-
-
cited in note 2
-
There is considerable empirical support for the New Institutionalist version of organizational compliance with law. Analyses of the diffusion of various responses to law often show that the rate of adoption is proportionate to the prevalence of such structures in the population, which supports the notion of normative isomorphism. Edelman, 95 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2); id., 97 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2); John R. Sutton, Frank R. Dobbin, John W. Meyer, & W. Richard Scott "Legalization of the Workplace," 99 Am. J. Soc. 944 (1994). Further, Edelman, Uggen, and Erlanger find that while employers adopt discrimination grievance procedures in the belief that such procedures will reduce the likelihood of litigation, there is little objective evidence to validate this belief. The personnel and legal professions, however, have actively promulgated this unsubstantiated assumption. Edelman et al., "Endogeneity" (cited in note 43).
-
Am. J. Soc.
, vol.97
-
-
Edelman1
-
171
-
-
84883963636
-
Legalization of the Workplace
-
There is considerable empirical support for the New Institutionalist version of organizational compliance with law. Analyses of the diffusion of various responses to law often show that the rate of adoption is proportionate to the prevalence of such structures in the population, which supports the notion of normative isomorphism. Edelman, 95 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2); id., 97 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2); John R. Sutton, Frank R. Dobbin, John W. Meyer, & W. Richard Scott "Legalization of the Workplace," 99 Am. J. Soc. 944 (1994). Further, Edelman, Uggen, and Erlanger find that while employers adopt discrimination grievance procedures in the belief that such procedures will reduce the likelihood of litigation, there is little objective evidence to validate this belief. The personnel and legal professions, however, have actively promulgated this unsubstantiated assumption. Edelman et al., "Endogeneity" (cited in note 43).
-
(1994)
Am. J. Soc.
, vol.99
, pp. 944
-
-
Sutton, J.R.1
Dobbin, F.R.2
Meyer, J.W.3
Richard Scott, W.4
-
172
-
-
85033032048
-
-
cited in note 43
-
There is considerable empirical support for the New Institutionalist version of organizational compliance with law. Analyses of the diffusion of various responses to law often show that the rate of adoption is proportionate to the prevalence of such structures in the population, which supports the notion of normative isomorphism. Edelman, 95 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2); id., 97 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2); John R. Sutton, Frank R. Dobbin, John W. Meyer, & W. Richard Scott "Legalization of the Workplace," 99 Am. J. Soc. 944 (1994). Further, Edelman, Uggen, and Erlanger find that while employers adopt discrimination grievance procedures in the belief that such procedures will reduce the likelihood of litigation, there is little objective evidence to validate this belief. The personnel and legal professions, however, have actively promulgated this unsubstantiated assumption. Edelman et al., "Endogeneity" (cited in note 43).
-
Endogeneity
-
-
Edelman1
-
173
-
-
85033006175
-
The Organization of Societal Sectors
-
cited in note 51
-
Emphasis added; Scott & Meyer, "The Organization of Societal Sectors," New institutionalism 124 (cited in note 51).
-
New Institutionalism
, pp. 124
-
-
Scott1
Meyer2
-
174
-
-
85033023379
-
-
note
-
While it might initially seem contradictory to claim both that organizations construct the meaning of law and that law constructs the capacities of organizations, an institutional perspective would suggest that this paradox rests on a faulty premise. The contradiction arises only if one assumes that each organization encounters the law in isolation from all others and that either the law or the organization or both must be exogenous to this encounter. In the institutional model, however, legal and organizational forms emerge together, as part of a larger process of sector-level development. Both laws and organizations gain solidity from the structuration of an entire institutional environment, and while both play important parts in this structuration, neither is purely an instrument of the other.
-
-
-
-
175
-
-
85033020621
-
-
cited in note 2
-
Edelman, 95 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2); id., 97 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2); Lauren B. Edelman & Stephen Petterson, "Symbols and Substance in Organizational Response to Civil Rights Law" (Dep't of Sociology, University of Wisconsin, Madison, 1994) ("Edelman & Petterson, 'Symbols and Substance'"); Edelman et al., "Endogeneity."
-
Am. J. Soc.
, vol.95
-
-
Edelman1
-
176
-
-
85033005649
-
-
cited in note 2
-
Edelman, 95 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2); id., 97 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2); Lauren B. Edelman & Stephen Petterson, "Symbols and Substance in Organizational Response to Civil Rights Law" (Dep't of Sociology, University of Wisconsin, Madison, 1994) ("Edelman & Petterson, 'Symbols and Substance'"); Edelman et al., "Endogeneity."
-
Am. J. Soc.
, vol.97
-
-
Edelman1
-
177
-
-
0039896994
-
-
Dep't of Sociology, University of Wisconsin, Madison
-
Edelman, 95 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2); id., 97 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2); Lauren B. Edelman & Stephen Petterson, "Symbols and Substance in Organizational Response to Civil Rights Law" (Dep't of Sociology, University of Wisconsin, Madison, 1994) ("Edelman & Petterson, 'Symbols and Substance'"); Edelman et al., "Endogeneity."
-
(1994)
Symbols and Substance in Organizational Response to Civil Rights Law
-
-
Edelman, L.B.1
Petterson, S.2
-
178
-
-
85033016718
-
-
Edelman, 95 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2); id., 97 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2); Lauren B. Edelman & Stephen Petterson, "Symbols and Substance in Organizational Response to Civil Rights Law" (Dep't of Sociology, University of Wisconsin, Madison, 1994) ("Edelman & Petterson, 'Symbols and Substance'"); Edelman et al., "Endogeneity."
-
Symbols and Substance
-
-
Edelman1
Petterson2
-
179
-
-
85033032048
-
-
Edelman, 95 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2); id., 97 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2); Lauren B. Edelman & Stephen Petterson, "Symbols and Substance in Organizational Response to Civil Rights Law" (Dep't of Sociology, University of Wisconsin, Madison, 1994) ("Edelman & Petterson, 'Symbols and Substance'"); Edelman et al., "Endogeneity."
-
Endogeneity
-
-
Edelman1
-
180
-
-
85033015630
-
-
Edelman, 97 Am. J. Soc.; Edelman et al., "Endogeneity."
-
Am. J. Soc.
, vol.97
-
-
Edelman1
-
183
-
-
0011322694
-
A Realistic Jurisprudence-The Next Step
-
"Rule skepticism" actually predates the Law and Society tradition, having first been introduced by the Legal Realists in the 1930s. See, e.g., Karl Llewellyn, "A Realistic Jurisprudence-The Next Step," 30 Colum. L. Rev. 431 (1930)."
-
(1930)
Colum. L. Rev.
, vol.30
, pp. 431
-
-
Llewellyn, K.1
-
184
-
-
84935028059
-
The Ideology of Law: Advances and Problems in Recent Applications of the Concept of Ideology to the Analysis of Law
-
See, e.g., Alan Hunt, "The Ideology of Law: Advances and Problems in Recent Applications of the Concept of Ideology to the Analysis of Law," 19 Law & Soc'y Rev' 11 (1985).
-
(1985)
Law & Soc'y Rev'
, vol.19
, pp. 11
-
-
Hunt, A.1
-
185
-
-
85033007345
-
-
note
-
Other versions of structuralism are reasonably compatible with radical indeterminacy: One could, for example, formulate a model in which the relative autonomy of the law would rest solely on a system of material checks and balances, with doctrine playing little independent role. However, such materialist structuralism, like crass instrumentalism, enjoys little support in contemporary sociolegal circles. Rather the tone of the debate is closer to the position of Critical Legal Studies, which holds that contradictions among legal principles are so consequential that by revealing them, one can actually problematize and delegitimize the social order as a whole.
-
-
-
-
186
-
-
85033000651
-
-
note
-
Under the rubric of "legal culture," sociolegal scholars have begun to reexamine the internal consistency of formal and informal rule systems, in much the manner advocated here. To date, however, these investigations have been strong on description and weak on theory. Greater dialogue between students of legal culture and their counterparts in institutional analysis might go a long way toward remedying this imbalance.
-
-
-
-
191
-
-
0002351758
-
Iron Cage Revisited
-
DiMaggio & Powell, "Iron Cage Revisited," New Institutionalism 64-65. Cf. Scott & Meyer, "The Organization of Societal Sectors," New Institutionalism 117 ff. (cited in note 51). DiMaggio and Powell's concept of the "organizational field" is effectively identical to Scott &. Meyer's concept of the "societal sector," and most institutional theorists treat the two terms as virtually synonymous.
-
New Institutionalism
, pp. 64-65
-
-
DiMaggio1
Powell2
-
192
-
-
85033006175
-
The Organization of Societal Sectors
-
cited in note 51
-
DiMaggio & Powell, "Iron Cage Revisited," New Institutionalism 64-65. Cf. Scott & Meyer, "The Organization of Societal Sectors," New Institutionalism 117 ff. (cited in note 51). DiMaggio and Powell's concept of the "organizational field" is effectively identical to Scott &. Meyer's concept of the "societal sector," and most institutional theorists treat the two terms as virtually synonymous.
-
New Institutionalism
-
-
Scott1
Meyer2
-
193
-
-
0002351758
-
Iron Cage Revisited
-
cited in note 30
-
DiMaggio & Powell, "Iron Cage Revisited," New Institutionalism 65 (cited in note 30).
-
New Institutionalism
, pp. 65
-
-
DiMaggio1
Powell2
-
194
-
-
10144264323
-
-
Berkeley: University of California Press
-
See, e.g., Joseph R. Grodin, In Pursuit of Justice: Reflections of a State Supreme Court Justice (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1989) ("Grodin, In Pursuit of Justice"); Karl N. Llewellyn, "The Normative, the Legal, and the Law-Jobs: The Problem of Juristic Method," 49 Yale L.J. 1355-400 (1940); id., "What Price Contract? An Essay in Perspective," in Lawrence M. Friedman & Stewart Macaulay, eds., Law and the Behavioral Sciences (2d ed. Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill, 1977).
-
(1989)
Pursuit of Justice: Reflections of a State Supreme Court Justice
-
-
Grodin, J.R.1
-
195
-
-
10144250698
-
-
See, e.g., Joseph R. Grodin, In Pursuit of Justice: Reflections of a State Supreme Court Justice (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1989) ("Grodin, In Pursuit of Justice"); Karl N. Llewellyn, "The Normative, the Legal, and the Law-Jobs: The Problem of Juristic Method," 49 Yale L.J. 1355-400 (1940); id., "What Price Contract? An Essay in Perspective," in Lawrence M. Friedman & Stewart Macaulay, eds., Law and the Behavioral Sciences (2d ed. Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill, 1977).
-
Pursuit of Justice
-
-
Grodin1
-
196
-
-
0037737569
-
The Normative, the Legal, and the Law-Jobs: The Problem of Juristic Method
-
See, e.g., Joseph R. Grodin, In Pursuit of Justice: Reflections of a State Supreme Court Justice (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1989) ("Grodin, In Pursuit of Justice"); Karl N. Llewellyn, "The Normative, the Legal, and the Law-Jobs: The Problem of Juristic Method," 49 Yale L.J. 1355-400 (1940); id., "What Price Contract? An Essay in Perspective," in Lawrence M. Friedman & Stewart Macaulay, eds., Law and the Behavioral Sciences (2d ed. Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill, 1977).
-
(1940)
Yale L.J.
, vol.49
, pp. 1355-1400
-
-
Llewellyn, K.N.1
-
197
-
-
10144256239
-
What Price Contract? An Essay in Perspective
-
Lawrence M. Friedman & Stewart Macaulay, eds., Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill
-
See, e.g., Joseph R. Grodin, In Pursuit of Justice: Reflections of a State Supreme Court Justice (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1989) ("Grodin, In Pursuit of Justice"); Karl N. Llewellyn, "The Normative, the Legal, and the Law-Jobs: The Problem of Juristic Method," 49 Yale L.J. 1355-400 (1940); id., "What Price Contract? An Essay in Perspective," in Lawrence M. Friedman & Stewart Macaulay, eds., Law and the Behavioral Sciences (2d ed. Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill, 1977).
-
(1977)
Law and the Behavioral Sciences 2d Ed.
-
-
Llewellyn, K.N.1
-
198
-
-
84928221938
-
Ecology and Culture in the Communication or Precedent among State Supreme Courts, 1870-1970
-
Cf. Peter Harris, "Ecology and Culture in the Communication or Precedent among State Supreme Courts, 1870-1970," 19 Law & Soc'y Rev' 449 (1985).
-
(1985)
Law & Soc'y Rev'
, vol.19
, pp. 449
-
-
Harris, P.1
-
200
-
-
10144219698
-
Lawyers, Litigants, Legislators: Explaining Crossnational Variation in Legal Activity
-
Washington, D.C.
-
See, e.g., Elizabeth Heger Boyle, "Lawyers, Litigants, Legislators: Explaining Crossnational Variation in Legal Activity" (presented at American Sociological Association annual meeting, Washington, D.C., 1995).
-
(1995)
American Sociological Association Annual Meeting
-
-
Boyle, E.H.1
-
201
-
-
0000928219
-
Expanding the Scope of Institutional Analysis
-
But see Walter W. Powell, "Expanding the Scope of Institutional Analysis," New Institutionalism; DiMaggio, "Constructing an Organizational Field," and Brint & Karabel, "Institutional Origins and Transformations," New Institutionalism (both cited in note 31); and Brint & Karabel, Diverted Dream (also cited in note 31).
-
New Institutionalism
-
-
Powell, W.W.1
-
202
-
-
85033013677
-
-
But see Walter W. Powell, "Expanding the Scope of Institutional Analysis," New Institutionalism; DiMaggio, "Constructing an Organizational Field," and Brint & Karabel, "Institutional Origins and Transformations," New Institutionalism (both cited in note 31); and Brint & Karabel, Diverted Dream (also cited in note 31).
-
Constructing An Organizational Field
-
-
DiMaggio1
-
203
-
-
85033001544
-
Institutional Origins and Transformations
-
both cited in note 31
-
But see Walter W. Powell, "Expanding the Scope of Institutional Analysis," New Institutionalism; DiMaggio, "Constructing an Organizational Field," and Brint & Karabel, "Institutional Origins and Transformations," New Institutionalism (both cited in note 31); and Brint & Karabel, Diverted Dream (also cited in note 31).
-
New Institutionalism
-
-
Brint1
Karabel2
-
204
-
-
0004270064
-
-
also cited in note 31
-
But see Walter W. Powell, "Expanding the Scope of Institutional Analysis," New Institutionalism; DiMaggio, "Constructing an Organizational Field," and Brint & Karabel, "Institutional Origins and Transformations," New Institutionalism (both cited in note 31); and Brint & Karabel, Diverted Dream (also cited in note 31).
-
Diverted Dream
-
-
Brint1
Karabel2
-
206
-
-
85033030887
-
Bringing Society Back in
-
cited in note 37
-
Readers who doubt the role of competing institutional logics in legal history might wish to consider the following litany from Friedland and Alford: Some of the most important struggles between groups, organizations and classes are over the appropriate relationships between institutions, and by which institutional logic different activities should be regulated. . . . Are families, churches or states to control education? Should reproduction be regulated by state, family or church? . . . Does equal protection apply to competition in the labor market? . . . Do the rights of citizenship apply to the economy or do those of the market apply to the state? . . . Although these struggles are acted out by groups and organizations, their consequences alter the interinstitutional relations constituting a society. Friedland & Alford, "Bringing Society Back In," New Institutionalism 256 (cited in note 37).
-
New Institutionalism
, pp. 256
-
-
Friedland1
Alford2
-
209
-
-
0000660765
-
Structural Transformation of American Industry
-
cited in note 31
-
Fligstein, "Structural Transformation of American Industry," New Institutionalism 314 (cited in note 31).
-
New Institutionalism
, pp. 314
-
-
Fligstein1
-
210
-
-
85033013841
-
-
Clune, 69 Iowa L. Rev.; Hawkins, Environment and Enforcement (both cited in note 49).
-
Iowa L. Rev.
, vol.69
-
-
Clune1
-
214
-
-
0007041947
-
Implementation and Ambiguity
-
James March, ed., Oxford: Basil Blackwell
-
See, e.g., Vicki Eaton Baier, James G. March, & Harald Saetren, "Implementation and Ambiguity," in James March, ed., Decisions and Organizations (Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1988) ("Baier et al., 'Implementation'"); Teresa L. Scheid-Cook, "Organizational Enactments and Conformity to Environmental Prescriptions," 45 Human Relations 537 (1992).
-
(1988)
Decisions and Organizations
-
-
Baier, V.E.1
March, J.G.2
Saetren, H.3
-
215
-
-
84871002351
-
-
See, e.g., Vicki Eaton Baier, James G. March, & Harald Saetren, "Implementation and Ambiguity," in James March, ed., Decisions and Organizations (Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1988) ("Baier et al., 'Implementation'"); Teresa L. Scheid-Cook, "Organizational Enactments and Conformity to Environmental Prescriptions," 45 Human Relations 537 (1992).
-
Implementation
-
-
Baier1
-
216
-
-
84973847570
-
Organizational Enactments and Conformity to Environmental Prescriptions
-
See, e.g., Vicki Eaton Baier, James G. March, & Harald Saetren, "Implementation and Ambiguity," in James March, ed., Decisions and Organizations (Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1988) ("Baier et al., 'Implementation'"); Teresa L. Scheid-Cook, "Organizational Enactments and Conformity to Environmental Prescriptions," 45 Human Relations 537 (1992).
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(1992)
Human Relations
, vol.45
, pp. 537
-
-
Scheid-Cook, T.L.1
-
217
-
-
0000660765
-
Structural Transformation of American Industry
-
See, e.g., Fligstein, "Structural Transformation of American Industry," New Institutionalism; Tolbert & Zucker, 28 Admin. Sci. Q. (cited in note 7).
-
New Institutionalism
-
-
Fligstein1
-
218
-
-
85033024493
-
-
cited in note 7
-
See, e.g., Fligstein, "Structural Transformation of American Industry," New Institutionalism; Tolbert & Zucker, 28 Admin. Sci. Q. (cited in note 7).
-
Admin. Sci. Q.
, vol.28
-
-
Tolbert1
Zucker2
-
219
-
-
0004260291
-
-
Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall
-
Robert L. Kidder, Connecting Law and Society (Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 1983); Stewart Macaulay, "Images of Law in Everyday Life: The Lessons of School, Entertainment, and Spectator Sports," 21 Law & Soc'y Rev. 185 (1987); Marc Galanter, "The Civil Jury as Regulator of the Litigation Process," 1990 U. Chi. Legal F. 201 (1990); Lauren B. Edelman, Steven E. Abraham, & Howard S. Erlanger, "Professional Construction of the Legal Environment: The Inflated Threat of Wrongful Discharge Doctrine," 26 Law & Soc'y Rev. 47 (1992).
-
(1983)
Connecting Law and Society
-
-
Kidder, R.L.1
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220
-
-
84934564211
-
Images of Law in Everyday Life: The Lessons of School, Entertainment, and Spectator Sports
-
Robert L. Kidder, Connecting Law and Society (Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 1983); Stewart Macaulay, "Images of Law in Everyday Life: The Lessons of School, Entertainment, and Spectator Sports," 21 Law & Soc'y Rev. 185 (1987); Marc Galanter, "The Civil Jury as Regulator of the Litigation Process," 1990 U. Chi. Legal F. 201 (1990); Lauren B. Edelman, Steven E. Abraham, & Howard S. Erlanger, "Professional Construction of the Legal Environment: The Inflated Threat of Wrongful Discharge Doctrine," 26 Law & Soc'y Rev. 47 (1992).
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(1987)
Law & Soc'y Rev.
, vol.21
, pp. 185
-
-
Macaulay, S.1
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221
-
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0346043147
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The Civil Jury as Regulator of the Litigation Process
-
Robert L. Kidder, Connecting Law and Society (Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 1983); Stewart Macaulay, "Images of Law in Everyday Life: The Lessons of School, Entertainment, and Spectator Sports," 21 Law & Soc'y Rev. 185 (1987); Marc Galanter, "The Civil Jury as Regulator of the Litigation Process," 1990 U. Chi. Legal F. 201 (1990); Lauren B. Edelman, Steven E. Abraham, & Howard S. Erlanger, "Professional Construction of the Legal Environment: The Inflated Threat of Wrongful Discharge Doctrine," 26 Law & Soc'y Rev. 47 (1992).
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(1990)
U. Chi. Legal F.
, vol.1990
, pp. 201
-
-
Galanter, M.1
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222
-
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81255211214
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Professional Construction of the Legal Environment: The Inflated Threat of Wrongful Discharge Doctrine
-
Robert L. Kidder, Connecting Law and Society (Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 1983); Stewart Macaulay, "Images of Law in Everyday Life: The Lessons of School, Entertainment, and Spectator Sports," 21 Law & Soc'y Rev. 185 (1987); Marc Galanter, "The Civil Jury as Regulator of the Litigation Process," 1990 U. Chi. Legal F. 201 (1990); Lauren B. Edelman, Steven E. Abraham, & Howard S. Erlanger, "Professional Construction of the Legal Environment: The Inflated Threat of Wrongful Discharge Doctrine," 26 Law & Soc'y Rev. 47 (1992).
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Law & Soc'y Rev.
, vol.26
, pp. 47
-
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Edelman, L.B.1
Abraham, S.E.2
Erlanger, H.S.3
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On the Social Significance of Large Law Firm Practice
-
Robert A. Kagan & Robert E. Rosen, "On the Social Significance of Large Law Firm Practice," 37 Stan. L. Rev. 399 (1985); Robert C. Ellickson, "Of Coase and Cattle: Dispute Resolution among Neighbors in Shasta County," 38 Stan. L. Rev. 623 (1986).
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Stan. L. Rev.
, vol.37
, pp. 399
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Kagan, R.A.1
Rosen, R.E.2
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224
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84867322468
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Of Coase and Cattle: Dispute Resolution among Neighbors in Shasta County
-
Robert A. Kagan & Robert E. Rosen, "On the Social Significance of Large Law Firm Practice," 37 Stan. L. Rev. 399 (1985); Robert C. Ellickson, "Of Coase and Cattle: Dispute Resolution among Neighbors in Shasta County," 38 Stan. L. Rev. 623 (1986).
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Stan. L. Rev.
, vol.38
, pp. 623
-
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Ellickson, R.C.1
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226
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0003450976
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Cf. Weick, Social Psychology of Organizing; James G. March, "Decisions in Organizations and Theories of Choice," in Van de Van & Joyce, Perspectives (cited in note 39); ScheidCook, 45 Hum. Rel.
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Social Psychology of Organizing
-
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Weick1
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227
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85033031957
-
Decisions in Organizations and Theories of Choice
-
Van de Van & Joyce, cited in note 39;
-
Cf. Weick, Social Psychology of Organizing; James G. March, "Decisions in Organizations and Theories of Choice," in Van de Van & Joyce, Perspectives (cited in note 39); ScheidCook, 45 Hum. Rel.
-
Perspectives
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March, J.G.1
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228
-
-
85033008395
-
-
Cf. Weick, Social Psychology of Organizing; James G. March, "Decisions in Organizations and Theories of Choice," in Van de Van & Joyce, Perspectives (cited in note 39); ScheidCook, 45 Hum. Rel.
-
Hum. Rel.
, vol.45
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ScheidCook1
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229
-
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84994930794
-
Law and the Behavioral Sciences: Is There Any There There?
-
Stewart Macaulay, "Law and the Behavioral Sciences: Is There Any There There?" 6 Law & Pol'y 149, 152-53 (1984).
-
(1984)
Law & Pol'y
, vol.6
, pp. 149
-
-
Macaulay, S.1
-
230
-
-
85033030134
-
-
cited in note 10
-
Indeed, in many settings, the highest crime under the informal law is an overzealous use of the formal law. See, e.g., Macaulay, 28 Am. Soc. Rev. (cited in note 10); Ellickson, 38 Stan. L. Rev.
-
Am. Soc. Rev.
, vol.28
-
-
Macaulay1
-
231
-
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85033025094
-
-
Indeed, in many settings, the highest crime under the informal law is an overzealous use of the formal law. See, e.g., Macaulay, 28 Am. Soc. Rev. (cited in note 10); Ellickson, 38 Stan. L. Rev.
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Stan. L. Rev.
, vol.38
-
-
Ellickson1
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232
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85032784143
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Law & Social Change: The Semi-autonomous Social Field as an Appropriate Subject of Study
-
See, e.g., Sally Falk Moore, "Law & Social Change: The Semi-autonomous Social Field as an Appropriate Subject of Study," 7 Law & Soc'y Rev. 719 (1973); Gregory Massell, "Law as an Instrument of Revolutionary Change in a Traditional Milieu: The Case of Soviet Central Asia," 2 Law & Soc'y Rev. 179 (1969).
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Law & Soc'y Rev.
, vol.7
, pp. 719
-
-
Moore, S.F.1
-
233
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52849121861
-
Law as an Instrument of Revolutionary Change in a Traditional Milieu: The Case of Soviet Central Asia
-
See, e.g., Sally Falk Moore, "Law & Social Change: The Semi-autonomous Social Field as an Appropriate Subject of Study," 7 Law & Soc'y Rev. 719 (1973); Gregory Massell, "Law as an Instrument of Revolutionary Change in a Traditional Milieu: The Case of Soviet Central Asia," 2 Law & Soc'y Rev. 179 (1969).
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Law & Soc'y Rev.
, vol.2
, pp. 179
-
-
Massell, G.1
-
234
-
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-
Intergroup Conflict, Law, and the Concept of Labor Market Discrimination
-
See, e.g., Paul Burstein, "Intergroup Conflict, Law, and the Concept of Labor Market Discrimination," 5 Soc. F. 459 (1990); Edelman, 97 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2); Blumrosen, Modern Law (cited in note 1).
-
(1990)
Soc. F.
, vol.5
, pp. 459
-
-
Burstein, P.1
-
235
-
-
4243103571
-
-
cited in note 2
-
See, e.g., Paul Burstein, "Intergroup Conflict, Law, and the Concept of Labor Market Discrimination," 5 Soc. F. 459 (1990); Edelman, 97 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2); Blumrosen, Modern Law (cited in note 1).
-
Am. J. Soc.
, vol.97
-
-
Edelman1
-
236
-
-
4243103571
-
-
cited in note 1
-
See, e.g., Paul Burstein, "Intergroup Conflict, Law, and the Concept of Labor Market Discrimination," 5 Soc. F. 459 (1990); Edelman, 97 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2); Blumrosen, Modern Law (cited in note 1).
-
Modern Law
-
-
Blumrosen1
-
237
-
-
85033008755
-
Institutionalization and the Rationality of Formal Organizational Structure
-
Meyer & Scott, cited in note 22
-
Meyer, "Institutionalization and the Rationality of Formal Organizational Structure," in Meyer & Scott, Organizational Environments (cited in note 22).
-
Organizational Environments
-
-
Meyer1
-
239
-
-
0022627077
-
-
cited in note 92
-
Weick, Social Psychology of Organizing (cited in note 92); cf. Stephen R. Barley, "Technology as an Occasion for Structuring: Evidence from Observations of CT Scanners and the Social Order of Radiology Departments," 31 Admin. Sci. Q. 78 (1986).
-
Social Psychology of Organizing
-
-
Weick1
-
240
-
-
0022627077
-
Technology as an Occasion for Structuring: Evidence from Observations of CT Scanners and the Social Order of Radiology Departments
-
Weick, Social Psychology of Organizing (cited in note 92); cf. Stephen R. Barley, "Technology as an Occasion for Structuring: Evidence from Observations of CT Scanners and the Social Order of Radiology Departments," 31 Admin. Sci. Q. 78 (1986).
-
(1986)
Admin. Sci. Q.
, vol.31
, pp. 78
-
-
Barley, S.R.1
-
241
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-
84858492197
-
A Garbage Can Model of Organizational Choice
-
Michael D. Cohen, James G. March, & John P. Olsen, "A Garbage Can Model of Organizational Choice," 1 Admin. Sci. Q. 1 (1972).
-
(1972)
Admin. Sci. Q.
, vol.1
, pp. 1
-
-
Cohen, M.D.1
March, J.G.2
Olsen, J.P.3
-
244
-
-
85033025739
-
Public Order
-
cited in note 38
-
See, e.g., Jepperson & Meyer, "Public Order," New Institutionalism 227 (cited in note 38) ("In sociological analyses, the term power is commonly used to refer to authority that the analyst wishes to delegitimate"); see also Friedland & Alford, "Bringing Society Back In," New Institutionalism 242 ff. (cited in note 37).
-
New Institutionalism
, pp. 227
-
-
Jepperson1
Meyer2
-
245
-
-
85033030887
-
Bringing Society Back in
-
cited in note 37
-
See, e.g., Jepperson & Meyer, "Public Order," New Institutionalism 227 (cited in note 38) ("In sociological analyses, the term power is commonly used to refer to authority that the analyst wishes to delegitimate"); see also Friedland & Alford, "Bringing Society Back In," New Institutionalism 242 ff. (cited in note 37).
-
New Institutionalism
-
-
Friedland1
Alford2
-
246
-
-
0000660765
-
Structural Transformation of American Industry
-
cited in note 31
-
Fligstein, "Structural Transformation of American Industry," New Institutionalism 321 (cited in note 31).
-
New Institutionalism
, pp. 321
-
-
Fligstein1
-
247
-
-
85033026344
-
-
cited in note 49
-
Clune, 69 Iowa L. Rev. (cited in note 49); Hawkins, Environment and Enforcement (cited in note 49); Baier et al., "Implementation" (cited in note 93); Blumrosen, Modern Law (cited in note 1).
-
Iowa L. Rev.
, vol.69
-
-
Clune1
-
248
-
-
0003735149
-
-
cited in note 49
-
Clune, 69 Iowa L. Rev. (cited in note 49); Hawkins, Environment and Enforcement (cited in note 49); Baier et al., "Implementation" (cited in note 93); Blumrosen, Modern Law (cited in note 1).
-
Environment and Enforcement
-
-
Hawkins1
-
249
-
-
84871002351
-
-
cited in note 93
-
Clune, 69 Iowa L. Rev. (cited in note 49); Hawkins, Environment and Enforcement (cited in note 49); Baier et al., "Implementation" (cited in note 93); Blumrosen, Modern Law (cited in note 1).
-
Implementation
-
-
Baier1
-
250
-
-
84883987349
-
-
cited in note 1
-
Clune, 69 Iowa L. Rev. (cited in note 49); Hawkins, Environment and Enforcement (cited in note 49); Baier et al., "Implementation" (cited in note 93); Blumrosen, Modern Law (cited in note 1).
-
Modern Law
-
-
Blumrosen1
-
251
-
-
85033019810
-
-
note
-
Indeed, one plausible way to understand ambiguous statutes is as devices for overcoming legislative contention by implicitly allowing each side to "make a bet" on the outcome of subsequent interpretation. This technique has the political appeal of permitting the ultimate loser to plead good intentions and to decry the sorry perversion of "legislative intent."
-
-
-
-
253
-
-
85032998996
-
-
cited in note 2
-
Edelman, 97 Am. J. Soc. (cited in note 2).
-
Am. J. Soc.
, vol.97
-
-
Edelman1
-
254
-
-
85033002640
-
-
Clune, 69 Iowa L. Rev; Edelman, 97 Am. J. Soc.; Edelman et al., "Endogeneity" (cited in note 43).
-
Iowa L. Rev
, vol.69
-
-
Clune1
-
255
-
-
85033020597
-
-
Clune, 69 Iowa L. Rev; Edelman, 97 Am. J. Soc.; Edelman et al., "Endogeneity" (cited in note 43).
-
Am. J. Soc.
, vol.97
-
-
Edelman1
-
256
-
-
85033032048
-
-
cited in note 43
-
Clune, 69 Iowa L. Rev; Edelman, 97 Am. J. Soc.; Edelman et al., "Endogeneity" (cited in note 43).
-
Endogeneity
-
-
Edelman1
-
257
-
-
85033015817
-
-
cited in note 95
-
Edelman et al., 26 Law & Soc'y Rev. (cited in note 95). Of course, such prescriptions are likely to become self-fulfilling prophecies, as "modern" personnel practices come to be seen by both employees and regulators as evidence of an employer's genuine concern for equal opportunity.
-
Law & Soc'y Rev.
, vol.26
-
-
Edelman1
-
258
-
-
0000660765
-
Structural Transformation of American Industry
-
Fligstein, "Structural Transformation of American Industry," New Institutionalism 321; cf. R.R. Ritti & Fred H. Goldner, "Professional Pluralism in an Industrial Organization," 16 Management Sci. 233-34 (1979).
-
New Institutionalism
, pp. 321
-
-
Fligstein1
-
259
-
-
10144231844
-
Professional Pluralism in an Industrial Organization
-
Fligstein, "Structural Transformation of American Industry," New Institutionalism 321; cf. R.R. Ritti & Fred H. Goldner, "Professional Pluralism in an Industrial Organization," 16 Management Sci. 233-34 (1979).
-
(1979)
Management Sci.
, vol.16
, pp. 233-234
-
-
Ritti, R.R.1
Goldner, F.H.2
-
260
-
-
85033014713
-
-
cited in note 3
-
Suchman, "On Advice of Counsel" (cited in note 3); id., "Localism and Globalism in Institutional Analysis: The Emergence of Contractual Norms in Venture Finance," in Scott & Christensen, Institutional Construction (cited in note 43).
-
On Advice of Counsel
-
-
Suchman1
-
261
-
-
85033003802
-
Localism and Globalism in Institutional Analysis: The Emergence of Contractual Norms in Venture Finance
-
Scott & Christensen, cited in note 43
-
Suchman, "On Advice of Counsel" (cited in note 3); id., "Localism and Globalism in Institutional Analysis: The Emergence of Contractual Norms in Venture Finance," in Scott & Christensen, Institutional Construction (cited in note 43).
-
Institutional Construction
-
-
Suchman1
-
262
-
-
79956121151
-
Why the 'Haves' Come Out Ahead: Speculations on the Limits of Legal Change
-
E.g., Marc Galanter, "Why the 'Haves' Come Out Ahead: Speculations on the Limits of Legal Change," 9 Law & Soc'y Rev. 95 (1974).
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Law & Soc'y Rev.
, vol.9
, pp. 95
-
-
Galanter, M.1
-
263
-
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85033030887
-
Bringing Society Back in
-
cited in note 37
-
See, e.g., Friedland & Alford, "Bringing Society Back In," New lnstitutionalism (cited in note 37).
-
New Lnstitutionalism
-
-
Friedland1
Alford2
-
264
-
-
84994930794
-
-
cited in note 99
-
Cf. Macaulay, 6 Law & Pol'y at 149-87 (cited in note 99).
-
Law & Pol'y
, vol.6
, pp. 149-187
-
-
Macaulay1
-
265
-
-
0009288256
-
Toward an Historical Understanding of Legal Consciousness: The Case of Classical Legal Thought in America, 1850-1940
-
E.g., Duncan Kennedy, "Toward an Historical Understanding of Legal Consciousness: The Case of Classical Legal Thought in America, 1850-1940," 3 Res. L. & Soc. 3 (1980); Gabel, 3 Res. L. & Soc. (cited in note 5); Robert W. Gordon, "Critical Legal Histories," 36 Stan. L. Rev. 57-125 (1984); Boyle, 133 U. Pa. L. Rev. (cited in note 13).
-
(1980)
Res. L. & Soc.
, vol.3
, pp. 3
-
-
Kennedy, D.1
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266
-
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85033033495
-
-
cited in note 5
-
E.g., Duncan Kennedy, "Toward an Historical Understanding of Legal Consciousness: The Case of Classical Legal Thought in America, 1850-1940," 3 Res. L. & Soc. 3 (1980); Gabel, 3 Res. L. & Soc. (cited in note 5); Robert W. Gordon, "Critical Legal Histories," 36 Stan. L. Rev. 57-125 (1984); Boyle, 133 U. Pa. L. Rev. (cited in note 13).
-
Res. L. & Soc.
, vol.3
-
-
Gabel1
-
267
-
-
84927454086
-
Critical Legal Histories
-
E.g., Duncan Kennedy, "Toward an Historical Understanding of Legal Consciousness: The Case of Classical Legal Thought in America, 1850-1940," 3 Res. L. & Soc. 3 (1980); Gabel, 3 Res. L. & Soc. (cited in note 5); Robert W. Gordon, "Critical Legal Histories," 36 Stan. L. Rev. 57-125 (1984); Boyle, 133 U. Pa. L. Rev. (cited in note 13).
-
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Stan. L. Rev.
, vol.36
, pp. 57-125
-
-
Gordon, R.W.1
-
268
-
-
85033009133
-
-
cited in note 13
-
E.g., Duncan Kennedy, "Toward an Historical Understanding of Legal Consciousness: The Case of Classical Legal Thought in America, 1850-1940," 3 Res. L. & Soc. 3 (1980); Gabel, 3 Res. L. & Soc. (cited in note 5); Robert W. Gordon, "Critical Legal Histories," 36 Stan. L. Rev. 57-125 (1984); Boyle, 133 U. Pa. L. Rev. (cited in note 13).
-
U. Pa. L. Rev.
, vol.133
-
-
Boyle1
-
269
-
-
0004291748
-
-
Syracuse, N.Y.: Syracuse University Press
-
Cf. Mary Douglas, How Institutions Think (Syracuse, N.Y.: Syracuse University Press, 1986).
-
(1986)
How Institutions Think
-
-
Douglas, M.1
-
270
-
-
85033004994
-
-
note
-
This may be particularly true during periods of radical sociopolitical realignment, such as the break-up of the Eastern Bloc or the formation of the European Community. When society's normative order is in turmoil, the purported objectivity and universality of the law can serve as a crucial symbolic seed for reestablishing shared meanings. Disparate local communities may not agree on the content of specific legal rules; however, if they can agree that certain rules exist, and that those rules can, in theory, be comprehended and obeyed, that is a start.
-
-
-
-
271
-
-
85033007292
-
Un-trashing the Garbage Can: The Case of the Common Law
-
Pacific Grove, Cal.
-
Mark C. Suchman, "Un-trashing the Garbage Can: The Case of the Common Law" (presented at Stanford Conference on Organizations at Asilomar, Pacific Grove, Cal., 1990).
-
(1990)
Stanford Conference on Organizations at Asilomar
-
-
Suchman, M.C.1
-
272
-
-
85033032682
-
-
Galanter, 9 Law & Soc'y Rev.; id., "Case Congregations and Their Careers," 24 Law & Soc'y Rev. 371-95 (1990).
-
Law & Soc'y Rev.
, vol.9
-
-
Galanter1
-
273
-
-
84929227691
-
Case Congregations and Their Careers
-
Galanter, 9 Law & Soc'y Rev.; id., "Case Congregations and Their Careers," 24 Law & Soc'y Rev. 371-95 (1990).
-
(1990)
Law & Soc'y Rev.
, vol.24
, pp. 371-395
-
-
Galanter1
-
275
-
-
0003633517
-
-
New York: Pantheon Books
-
Eugene D. Genovese, Roll Jordan Roll (New York: Pantheon Books, 1976); Tyler & Lind, Social Psychology of Procedural Justice (cited in note 38).
-
(1976)
Roll Jordan Roll
-
-
Genovese, E.D.1
-
279
-
-
85033005701
-
-
note
-
Even when courts independently evaluate a law, they often base their assessment on the prior history of regulatory action (e.g., administrative "letter rulings") - a history which may, itself, reflect constructions of law negotiated between regulators and members of the regulated industry.
-
-
-
-
280
-
-
85033014713
-
-
cite in note 3
-
See, e.g., Suchman, "On Advice of Counsel" (cite in note 3); Ryken Grattet, "Coalition, and Conference: Social Networks and the Structuration of an Organizational Field" (Dep't of Sociology, Louisiana State University, 1995).
-
On Advice of Counsel
-
-
Suchman1
-
281
-
-
85032998085
-
-
Dep't of Sociology, Louisiana State University
-
See, e.g., Suchman, "On Advice of Counsel" (cite in note 3); Ryken Grattet, "Coalition, and Conference: Social Networks and the Structuration of an Organizational Field" (Dep't of Sociology, Louisiana State University, 1995).
-
(1995)
Coalition, and Conference: Social Networks and the Structuration of An Organizational Field
-
-
Grattet, R.1
-
282
-
-
85033009769
-
Constructing an Organizational Field
-
See, e.g., DiMaggio, "Constructing an Organizational Field," New Institutionalism, Brint & Karabel, "Institutional Origins and Transformations," New Institutionalism, and Galaskiewicz, "Making Corporate Actors Accountable," New Institutionalism (all cited in note 31).
-
New Institutionalism
-
-
DiMaggio1
-
283
-
-
85033001544
-
Institutional Origins and Transformations
-
See, e.g., DiMaggio, "Constructing an Organizational Field," New Institutionalism, Brint & Karabel, "Institutional Origins and Transformations," New Institutionalism, and Galaskiewicz, "Making Corporate Actors Accountable," New Institutionalism (all cited in note 31).
-
New Institutionalism
-
-
Brint1
Karabel2
-
284
-
-
85033009316
-
Making Corporate Actors Accountable
-
all cited in note 31
-
See, e.g., DiMaggio, "Constructing an Organizational Field," New Institutionalism, Brint & Karabel, "Institutional Origins and Transformations," New Institutionalism, and Galaskiewicz, "Making Corporate Actors Accountable," New Institutionalism (all cited in note 31).
-
New Institutionalism
-
-
Galaskiewicz1
|