Gerald R. Salancik

Gerald R. (Jerry) Salancik (Jan. 29, 1943 - July 24, 1996)[1] was an American organizational theorist, and Professor at Carnegie Mellon University. He is best known for his work with Jeffrey Pfeffer on "organizational decision making"[2] and "the external control of organizations."[3]

Life and work

Salancik obtained his BS in Journalism in 1965 from the Northwestern University, and obtained his PhD in experimental social psychology in 1971 at Yale University.[4][5]

After his graduation Salancik was researcher at the Institute for the Future for a year. In 1972 he was appointed Associate Professor of Organization Behavior at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign.[4] Salancik was eventually appointed the D.B. Kirr Professor of Organization at the Graduate School of Industrial Administration at Carnegie Mellon University.

Work

In the early 1970s at the Institute for the Future Salancik started his study of "purposeful adjustment of organizations to environmental change [which] led naturally to a concern for power, both within and between organizations."[4] His research interests developed into the "areas of organizational power, commitment, attitude change, and technological forecasting... [and specifically] on strategic planning problems for organizations and on issues of control and change."[4]

Salancik became known for his work with Pfeffer on organizational decision making, and external control of organizations. In their opinion "organizations should be understood in terms of their interdependence with their environments. They advocate a resource dependence perspective. For example, explaining discontent among the employees of a fastfood chain in terms of poor human relations and poor pay is irrelevant if the organization can draw on a pool of easily recruited youthful labor; and because its competitors can do so, too, the organization is not going to incur the costs of better human relations and pay."[6]

Legacy

The Gerald R. Salancik Doctoral Dissertation Award is given each year to a doctoral student in Organizational Behavior & Theory at the Tepper School of Business, Carnegie Mellon University.

Selected publications

  • Pfeffer, Jeffrey, and Gerald R. Salancik. The external control of organizations: A resource dependence perspective. Stanford University Press, 1978; 2003.
  • Salancik, Gerald R., and Barry M. Staw (eds.) New directions in organizational behavior. Krieger, 1982.

Articles, a selection:

  • Pfeffer, Jeffrey, and Gerald R. Salancik. "Organizational decision making as a political process: The case of a university budget." Administrative Science Quarterly (1974): 135-151.
  • Salancik, Gerald R., and Jeffrey Pfeffer. "An examination of need-satisfaction models of job attitudes." Administrative science quarterly (1977): 427-456.
  • Salancik, Gerald R., and Jeffrey Pfeffer. "A social information processing approach to job attitudes and task design." Administrative science quarterly (1978): 224-253.
  • Leblebici, H., Salancik, G. R., Copay, A., & King, T. (1991). "Institutional change and the transformation of interorganizational fields: An organizational history of the US radio broadcasting industry." Administrative science quarterly, 333-363.
gollark: Not ALL the time.
gollark: Yes, which is why we do planning sensibly.
gollark: If you had an actual problem to solve, you would want it to be simpler.
gollark: No, you're just arbitrarily complicating things.
gollark: Unless you somehow need one really fancy machine.

References

  1. H. Leblebici. "Memorial for Gerald R. Salancik 1.29.1943-7.24.1996," Journal of Management Inquiry, September 1997 6: 256-261,
  2. Miles, Raymond E., et al. "Organizational strategy, structure, and process." Academy of management review 3.3 (1978): 546-562.
  3. Scott, W. Richard. Organizations. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice hall, 1987.
  4. Salancik, Gerald R., and Jeffrey Pfeffer. "Who gets power—and how they hold on to it: A strategic-contingency model of power." Organizational dynamics 5.3 (1978): 3-21.
  5. Frank Dobbin, Claudia Bird Schoonhoven. Stanford's Organization Theory Renaissance, 1970-2000. 2010. p. 22
  6. Derek Salman Pugh, David John Hickson (2007) Great Writers on Organizations. p. 66-67
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