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Cooperation and Compromise: A Network Response to Conflicting Institutional Pressures in Community Mental Health
Abstract
This article examines the behavioral dynamics at the interface between organizations in strategic partnerships called cause-based partnerships (CBPs). These are partnerships between a corporation and one or more nonprofit organizations that address social meta problems such as environmental sustainability or social-justice challenges. Various a priori differences such as tasks, processes, and organizational cultures are expected to affect outcomes, but this article argues that a key determinant of successful CBP performance is behavioral dynamics at the interface between the partners. This article builds a framework for understanding these behavioral dynamics in terms of an emergent culture. Three scenarios--integration, reculturation, and separation--are described for how participants in CBPs continually negotiate a workable set of cultural practices among them-selves. Examples are based on interviews with CBP managers. These explorations expand the basis for understanding CBP dynamics beyond those provided by static task, process, or common-culture explanations.
Journal
(2004)
vol33
no3
pages458-488
Categories
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Managing External Relations
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Other Inter-organizational relationships