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Organization Theory The Interface of Structure, Culture, Procedures, and Negotiation Processes Ji-ae, PARK & Alberto Mondi.

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Presentation on theme: "Organization Theory The Interface of Structure, Culture, Procedures, and Negotiation Processes Ji-ae, PARK & Alberto Mondi."— Presentation transcript:

1 Organization Theory The Interface of Structure, Culture, Procedures, and Negotiation Processes Ji-ae, PARK & Alberto Mondi

2 Index I.Why an Organization Theory is needed? II.What is an organization? III.Organizational Analysis: two perspectives for three dimensions IV.Application of theory: the cases of the Single European Act and the Uruguay Round of GATT V.Conclusions

3 Why an Organization Theory is needed? ORGANIZATIONAL ISSUES strongly INFLUENCE and AFFECT NEGOTIATIONS

4 What is an organization?  “a formal social grouping which is established in a more or less deliberate or purposive manner for the attainment of specific goals”  “a group of people who have a particular shared purpose or interest” (Macmillian Dictionary)  “An organization is a social arrangement which pursues collective goals, which controls its own performance, and which has a boundary separating it from its environment” (Wikipedia)  “An organization is essentially a separate and distinct group of people (and resources) that have been brought together for a common purpose or objective.” (Organization Theory for Leaders, Frank R. Hunsicker)

5 For better understanding: organizations and their goals  Amnesty International : to conduct research and generate action to prevent and end grave abuses of human rights.  APEC : cooperate on regional trade on investment liberalization and facilitation.  European Free Trade Associat ion: Liberalization of trade among the member states.  Consumers International : promote a fairer society through defending the rights of all consumers.  ADB : help its developing member countries reduce poverty and improve the quality of life of their people.  African Economic Community : establishing grounds for mutual economic development among the majority of African states.  … … …

6 Organizational Analysis: 2 perspectives for 3 dimensions STRUCTURALACTIONIST STRUCTURE DECISION-MAKING CONFLICT RESOLUTION

7 Two theoretical perspectives for analysis  Focus on the informal dimension of structure. Organizations are joined together by the choices individuals make and the actions they take;  Environment is a constraint to organizations;  Organizations seen as interacting individual and groups who seek to reach their own goals; ACTIONIST  Focus on the formal dimension of structure. Organizations are joined together by a formal structure and hierarchy;  Organizations integrally linked to the environments in which they operate;  Focus on the relation between the structure and the efficiency of decision making. STRUCTURAL

8 Three dimensions of analysis  the design of an organization and the degree to which its goal-setting processes and control mechanism are elaborated; Structural dimension  procedures, political situation and cultural values that influence the way decisions are made; Decision-making dimension  the causes of conflicts and the way they are tackled and solved. Conflict resolution dimension

9 An Organization Approach to Multilateral Negotiations

10 An organization approach to Multilateral Negotiations STRUCTURALACTIONIST STRUCTURE Formal Mechanism Allocation of work and regulations of activities; Bureaucracy and hierarchical structures; Existence of different stakeholder groups Adaptive, continuously changing Role of culture Shared culture Strong and developed past relationships Institutionalized informal norms Existence of diverse subcultures DECISION- MAKING Mechanism Rational Influenced by strategies and environment Political Highly adversarial Trade-off simplicity vs. optimization Goals Goal setting as a rationalistic and premeditate process Goals as the outcomes of a complex negotiation process Existence of unofficial goals CONFLICT RESOLUTION Dispute-resolution system Expertise mediation Conflict as an essential element Ad hoc mediation

11 Structure STRUCTURALACTIONIST STRUCTUREFormal Mechanism Allocation of work and regulations of activities; Bureaucracy and hierarchical structures; Existence of different stakeholder groups; Adaptive, continuously changing Role of culture Shared culture Strong and developed past relationships Institutionalized informal norms Existence of diverse subcultures

12 Decision-Making STRUCTURALACTIONIST DECISION- MAKING Mechanism Rational Influenced by strategies and environment Political Highly adversarial Trade-off simplicity vs. optimization Goals Goal setting as a rationalistic and premeditate process Goals as the outcomes of a complex negotiation process Existence of unofficial goals

13 Conflict Resolution STRUCTURALACTIONIST CONFLICT RESOLUTION Dispute-resolution system Expertise mediation Conflict as an essential element Ad hoc mediation

14 Application of theory: SEA and GATT’s Uruguay round in comparison

15 Application of Theory: SEA and GATT’s Uruguay round in comparison EC (SEA)GATT (UR) FORMAL STRUCTURE Structure Culture Goals Predict patterns of negotiations DECISION- MAKING CONFLICT RESOLUTION

16 Application of Theory: SEA and GATT’s Uruguay round in comparison EC (SEA)GATT (UR) FORMAL STRUCTURE Structure Well-articulated formal structure of and responsibilities; Set of formal rules and procedures; Lack of a defined structure; Individual actors often bypass the GATT’s Secretariat. Culture Shared information and past experiences; Shared culture of problem- solving; Absence of unifying cultural values; High possibility of misunderstanding Goals Goal-directed organization; Subgoals contribute to a well- defined overall goal. Many different goals; Inconsistency of the goals and disjoined activity. Predict patterns of negotiations Propensity to generate common deals and cooperative bargaining; Promotion of consensus. Division of task to deal with complexity; Negotiation similar to a coalition game.

17 EC (SEA)GATT (UR) FORMAL STRUCTURE Structure Well-articulated formal structure of and responsibilities; Set of formal rules and procedures; Lack of a defined structure; Individual actors often bypass the GATT’s Secretariat. Culture Shared information and past experiences; Shared culture of problem- solving; Absence of unifying cultural values; High possibility of misunderstanding Goals Goal-directed organization; Subgoals contribute to a well-defined overall goal. Many different goals; Inconsistency of the goals and disjoined activity. Predict patterns of negotiations Propensity to generate common deals and cooperative bargaining; Promotion of consensus. Division of task to deal with complexity; Negotiation similar to a coalition game.

18 Application of Theory: SEA and GATT’s Uruguay round in comparison EC (SEA)GATT (UR) DECISION- MAKING Aim of producing legislation; Procedures for facilitating decision- making; Reaching common consensus through negotiations; Leave aside issues that lack widespread support; Negotiation outside the structures. Aim of producing legislation; Cooperation and division of tasks with other specialized organizations; Reduction of complexity through segmented decision-making; Pre-negotiation; Negotiation outside the structures.

19 Application of Theory: SEA and GATT’s Uruguay round in comparison EC (SEA)GATT (UR) CONFLICT RESOLUTION Institutionalized use of mediation; Mediation as a role; Preference for problem- solving-Long-term commitment between members. Opportunistic use of mediation; Mediation as a function; Preference for improvised resolutions- “ keep the process going”.

20 Application of Theory: Some examples RED CROSSASEM FORMAL STRUCTURE Structure Assembly, Presidency, Assembly Council, Directorate; Defined regulations Secretariat that represents 45 countries; Culture Shared Different national cultures Goals 1949-Geneva Convention Strengthen Europe-Asia relationships Predict patterns of negotiations Adherence to a pre- determined strategy; Cohesion. Self-centered and adversarial; Coalitional attitude. DECISION- MAKING Structural and regulated. Division of tasks Consensual but slow. CONFLICT RESOLUTION Conflict-resolution is an intrinsic value. Mediation as a function.

21 Conclusions 1.Negotiations are organizations “in motion”; 2.Organizations affects negotiation: successes and failures; 3.Negotiations affects organizations: the process of institutionalization and learning; 4.The role of environment.

22 감사합니다. Thank You! 谢谢 Спасибо Баярлалаа


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