Reconsidering Formal Organization (Part II): Formal Organization and Regulation

Tuesday, 8 July 2025: 13:00-14:45
Location: FSE005 (Faculty of Education Sciences (FSE))
RC17 Sociology of Organization (host committee)

Language: English

The concept of formal organization has been a subject of intense debate in organizational sociology. Once a designated term for “organization” as the purposeful social arrangement of concerted action, it has long been considered either the outer or overt aspects of organization—the criteria, rules, and contractual relations that formally define the organization, beneath which the “real” and vibrant organization plays out—or treated with the skepticism that has shadowed the concept of bureaucracy; the latter being equated with those aspects of organization that mediate social relations in an authoritarian or mechanistic manner. In the context of these negative representations, public and private organizations have been keen on downplaying formal elements such as organization charts, ownership structures, and control functions in favor of deregulation, delayering, and informality.

However, efforts to discard formalization may have reached their limits. Faced with polycrises—pandemics, climate change, war, corporate scandals—governments are no longer convinced that formal organization can be dispensed with without adverse effects. The absence of formal boundaries in the gig economy is adding to the concern. How can increasingly complex and distributed activities be coordinated? How can opportunity and responsibility be balanced? This session invites papers exploring the role of formal organization for facing a range of challenges: societal, organizational, and individual. We welcome both empirical cases and theoretical studies, addressing issues pertinent to public, private, or civil organizations. Contributions can focus on the types, processes, or consequences of formal organization, as well as the effects of a lack of formalization.

Session Organizers:
Signe VIKKELSØ, Copenhagen Business School, Denmark and Paul DU GAY, Copenhagen Business School, Denmark
Oral Presentations
Towards a Theory of Organizational Jurisprudence
Joshua HURWITZ, University of Liverpool, United Kingdom
Saying No to Structures Is to Say No to Regulated Conflicts
Andersen NIELS ÅKERSTRØM, Copenhagen Business School, Denmark