Obstacles to collective action during a crisis: A Meta-organizational Perspective
Obstacles to collective action during a crisis: A Meta-organizational Perspective
Meta-organizations form to advance collective action. But collective action can be more difficult to coordinate for meta-organizations comprising governmental agencies or sovereign states, with system-level objectives often conflicting. These challenges can be more binding during a crisis, where the responses called for are outside of the original reason for the meta-organization's existence. We advance a framework for conceptualizing meta-organizations that focuses on both internal attributes and external perceptions and suggests how each may help or hinder meta-organization influence during a crisis. Using as a case study the response of the European Union (EU) to COVID-19 and, specifically, to air travel restrictions at the outbreak of the pandemic, we show how meta-organizations can have difficulties in responding expeditiously to crises, particularly when encountering contradictory system-level goals. We argue that meta-organizations must plan for crises during less turbulent times, developing the processes that contribute to the gradual creation of new system-level goals.
Hartwell, Christopher
18e77119-005f-49f5-834a-d7e2491c3207
Lawton, Thomas
afb7fbfb-b8f2-4d3b-b49f-7716ea12e317
Tingbani, Ishmael
e6b2741a-d792-4adf-84cc-a2f64d5545ca
Hartwell, Christopher
18e77119-005f-49f5-834a-d7e2491c3207
Lawton, Thomas
afb7fbfb-b8f2-4d3b-b49f-7716ea12e317
Tingbani, Ishmael
e6b2741a-d792-4adf-84cc-a2f64d5545ca
Hartwell, Christopher, Lawton, Thomas and Tingbani, Ishmael
(2023)
Obstacles to collective action during a crisis: A Meta-organizational Perspective.
European Management Review.
(In Press)
Abstract
Meta-organizations form to advance collective action. But collective action can be more difficult to coordinate for meta-organizations comprising governmental agencies or sovereign states, with system-level objectives often conflicting. These challenges can be more binding during a crisis, where the responses called for are outside of the original reason for the meta-organization's existence. We advance a framework for conceptualizing meta-organizations that focuses on both internal attributes and external perceptions and suggests how each may help or hinder meta-organization influence during a crisis. Using as a case study the response of the European Union (EU) to COVID-19 and, specifically, to air travel restrictions at the outbreak of the pandemic, we show how meta-organizations can have difficulties in responding expeditiously to crises, particularly when encountering contradictory system-level goals. We argue that meta-organizations must plan for crises during less turbulent times, developing the processes that contribute to the gradual creation of new system-level goals.
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Accepted/In Press date: 28 June 2023
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 478692
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/478692
ISSN: 1740-4754
PURE UUID: c4830a33-f087-473e-acee-2e11fb20da62
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Date deposited: 07 Jul 2023 16:37
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:02
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Author:
Christopher Hartwell
Author:
Thomas Lawton
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