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Moral economic regulation in organizations: a university example

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Moral economic regulation in organizations: a university example. / Sayer, Andrew.
In: Organization, Vol. 15, No. 2, 03.2008, p. 147-164.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Sayer A. Moral economic regulation in organizations: a university example. Organization. 2008 Mar;15(2):147-164. doi: 10.1177/1350508407086576

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Sayer, Andrew. / Moral economic regulation in organizations: a university example. In: Organization. 2008 ; Vol. 15, No. 2. pp. 147-164.

Bibtex

@article{2bc04745b6e343a6a89f71a245cb5402,
title = "Moral economic regulation in organizations: a university example",
abstract = "Starting from the standpoint that all organizations have some kind of moral principles and norms governing what their members are supposed to do and how they should be rewarded, the paper analyses a university example of the moral economy of organizations—the rationales of points systems for governing the workloads of academics and the dilemmas they create. These systems are supposed to value and allocate work according to principles of fairness, but have typically to be modified to take account of personal and economic pressures on individuals and their departments. The design and limits of such systems reveal a `normative partitioning' of activities, with different moral economic criteria being applied to work inputs, to the distribution of economic rewards, and to norms of collegiality. The motivational effects of using or doing without points systems are explored in relation to different management styles. The paper concludes with comments on approaches to ethics and organizational work, arguing that Aristotelian and Smithian approaches are superior to those of Weber and Durkheim.",
keywords = "distributive justice, ethics , moral economy , motivation , normative partitioning, points systems, universitites",
author = "Andrew Sayer",
year = "2008",
month = mar,
doi = "10.1177/1350508407086576",
language = "English",
volume = "15",
pages = "147--164",
journal = "Organization",
issn = "1350-5084",
publisher = "SAGE Publications Ltd",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Moral economic regulation in organizations: a university example

AU - Sayer, Andrew

PY - 2008/3

Y1 - 2008/3

N2 - Starting from the standpoint that all organizations have some kind of moral principles and norms governing what their members are supposed to do and how they should be rewarded, the paper analyses a university example of the moral economy of organizations—the rationales of points systems for governing the workloads of academics and the dilemmas they create. These systems are supposed to value and allocate work according to principles of fairness, but have typically to be modified to take account of personal and economic pressures on individuals and their departments. The design and limits of such systems reveal a `normative partitioning' of activities, with different moral economic criteria being applied to work inputs, to the distribution of economic rewards, and to norms of collegiality. The motivational effects of using or doing without points systems are explored in relation to different management styles. The paper concludes with comments on approaches to ethics and organizational work, arguing that Aristotelian and Smithian approaches are superior to those of Weber and Durkheim.

AB - Starting from the standpoint that all organizations have some kind of moral principles and norms governing what their members are supposed to do and how they should be rewarded, the paper analyses a university example of the moral economy of organizations—the rationales of points systems for governing the workloads of academics and the dilemmas they create. These systems are supposed to value and allocate work according to principles of fairness, but have typically to be modified to take account of personal and economic pressures on individuals and their departments. The design and limits of such systems reveal a `normative partitioning' of activities, with different moral economic criteria being applied to work inputs, to the distribution of economic rewards, and to norms of collegiality. The motivational effects of using or doing without points systems are explored in relation to different management styles. The paper concludes with comments on approaches to ethics and organizational work, arguing that Aristotelian and Smithian approaches are superior to those of Weber and Durkheim.

KW - distributive justice

KW - ethics

KW - moral economy

KW - motivation

KW - normative partitioning

KW - points systems

KW - universitites

U2 - 10.1177/1350508407086576

DO - 10.1177/1350508407086576

M3 - Journal article

VL - 15

SP - 147

EP - 164

JO - Organization

JF - Organization

SN - 1350-5084

IS - 2

ER -