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Article

Cultural Theory and the Dynamics of Organizational Change: The Response of Housing Associations in London to the Housing Act 1988

Pages 251-271 | Published online: 10 Dec 2007
 

Abstract

The aim of this article is to consider the most effective way of conceptualizing a sector that has undergone radical change: the UK voluntary housing sector. The article considers existing accounts of housing associations and classifies these into five analytically distinct groups: practitioners, historical accounts, managerialist approaches, network theorists and institutionalist accounts. The main contention is that each of these is limited in explanatory potential, primarily due to their neglect of culture. This article proposes a more detailed framework for developing an understanding of the substantial changes affecting housing associations since the 1980s; that offered by “grid‐group cultural theory”. The article provides longitudinal qualitative data obtained from London housing associations to support the contention that organizational change can most usefully be understood by reference to the cultural themes of hierarchy and individualism. The article contends that cultural theory offers the opportunity to develop a systematic analysis that accounts for institutional history and organizational differentiation.

Acknowledgements

The author thanks two anonymous reviewers for their comments on the initial draft of this article.

Notes

1. Since 1996 housing associations have been included under the generic term “registered social landlords” (RSLs) to represent the different kinds of housing organisations that can claim public subsidy. However, this article uses the term “housing associations” to illustrate the historical development of this institutional form.

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