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2. Exploring the Role of Instruments in the Transformation of Logics: The Case of Socially Responsible Investment
- Author
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Diane-Laure Arjaliès, Ivey Business School at Western University, London, Ontario, and HEC Paris Research Paper Series
- Subjects
Institutional Logics ,Labour economics ,jel:M40 ,Mediating Instruments ,JEL: M - Business Administration and Business Economics • Marketing • Accounting • Personnel Economics/M.M4 - Accounting and Auditing/M.M4.M40 - General ,Socially responsible investment ,jel:M41 ,Accounting ,Ethnography ,JEL: G - Financial Economics/G.G1 - General Financial Markets/G.G1.G11 - Portfolio Choice • Investment Decisions ,Business ,Asset management ,Equity Investment ,Fixed-Income Investment ,Materiality ,Socially Responsible Investment ,Open-ended investment company ,Materiality (auditing) ,Public economics ,business.industry ,JEL: M - Business Administration and Business Economics • Marketing • Accounting • Personnel Economics/M.M1 - Business Administration/M.M1.M14 - Corporate Culture • Diversity • Social Responsibility ,jel:G11 ,Fixed income ,JEL: M - Business Administration and Business Economics • Marketing • Accounting • Personnel Economics/M.M4 - Accounting and Auditing/M.M4.M41 - Accounting ,jel:M14 ,[SHS.GESTION]Humanities and Social Sciences/Business administration ,Working group ,Social responsibility - Abstract
The purpose of this article is to explore the role of instruments in the transformation of institutional logics and their associated practices at the micro level. Based on an ethnographic study, this article compares two working groups — one responsible for equity and the other for fixed-income investments — in an asset management company attempting to integrate new demands for socially responsible investment (SRI). These two working groups both sought to change their investment processes through the introduction of Electronic copy available at: http://ssrn.com/abstract=2434177 Electronic copy available at: http://ssrn.com/abstract=2434177 2 new calculative devices. The equity group was perceived to be more successful than the fixed-income group in introducing SRI because of its greater ability to fabricate calculative devices capable of mediating between financial returns and social responsibility. Elaborating on these findings, the article argues that instruments can effect institutional change when actors come to believe that available instruments are sufficiently flexible and incomplete to act as “mediating instruments” between practice and institutional change.
- Published
- 2014
3. Preface
- Author
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Krawczyk-Wasilewska, Violetta, Meder, Theo, Krawczyk-Wasilewska, Violetta, Meder, Theo, Ross, Andy, Department of Ethnology and Folklore, University of Łódź, Poland, Meertens Instituut, Amsterdam, The Netherlands, Krawczyk-Wasilewska, Violetta has been head of the Folklore Department at the University of Łódź, Poland, since 1991. She graduated in Literature (M.A.), History (Ph.D.) and Ethnology (habilitation thesis) and has been a Professor in Humanities (President of the State, Warsaw) since 2002. She specialises in the anthropology of culture and folklore. She is a member of several international research societies (SIEF since 1971, ISFNR since 1973, IOV since 1986, IUAES since 1996), a full member of the Folklore Fellows (nominated by the Finnish Academy of Sciences and Letters in 1991), and since 2004 has been a European Commission expert and evaluator. In 1987, she was a finalist for the international prize in Anthropological Studies, University of Palermo, Italy, in 1993 she was awarded a grant from University College London, in 1996 she won a grant from the Open University of Central Europe (Budapest and Prague), and in 2003 she was awarded the Tomaso Crudeli medal for human rights activity (Poppi, Italy). She has been a guest lecturer at many universities and published seven separate books and over 150 articles and papers of an interdisciplinary character. She is the editor of the international proceedings on Ecology and Folklore (1992, 1994, 1998). Her works include: Contemporary Studies on Folklore (Warsaw, 1986) and AIDS: An Anthropological Study (Łódź, 2000), both of which are in Polish but include full English summaries. Web: http://www.etnologia.uni.lodz.pl, and Meder, Theo (1960) studied Dutch language and literature at the University of Leiden and has worked since 1994 at the Meertens Instituut (Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences) in Amsterdam, The Netherlands, as a folk narrative researcher. He is coordinator of the online Dutch Folktale Database and author of books and articles concerning Dutch folktales and narrative culture. In 2007, he published The Flying Dutchman and Other Folktales from the Netherlands. He has been on the scientific board of Fabula since 2010 and he is a member of the Société Internationale d’Etnologie et de Folklore (SIEF), the International Society for Contemporary Legend Research (ISCLR), and the International Society for Folk Narrative Research (ISFNR) – in ISFNR he is the coordinator of the Committee for Folktales and the Internet. Since 2012 he has been leader of the computational project FACT (Folktales as Classifiable Texts) and co-leader of the e-humanities project Tunes & Tales. Web: http://about.me/theo.meder
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Internet ,second life ,social media ,cultural studies ,ethnography - Abstract
Udostępnienie publikacji Wydawnictwa Uniwersytetu Łódzkiego finansowane w ramach projektu „Doskonałość naukowa kluczem do doskonałości kształcenia”. Projekt realizowany jest ze środków Europejskiego Funduszu Społecznego w ramach Programu Operacyjnego Wiedza Edukacja Rozwój; nr umowy: POWER.03.05.00-00-Z092/17-00.
- Published
- 2012
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