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      Homology and isomorphism: Bourdieu in conversation with New Institutionalism.

      1
      The British journal of sociology
      Wiley
      Bourdieu, New Institutionalism, field, homology, isomorphism, organizations

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          Abstract

          Bourdieusian Field Theory (BFT) provided decisive inspiration for the early conceptual formulation of New Institutionalism (NI). This paper attempts to reinvigorate the stalled intellectual dialogue between NI and BFT by comparing NI's concept of isomorphism with BFT's notion of homology. I argue that Bourdieu's understanding of domination-oriented social action, transposable habitus, and a non-linear causality, embodied in his neglected concept of homology, provides an alternative theorization of field-level convergence to New Institutionalism's central idea of institutional isomorphism. To showcase how BFT can be useful for organizational research, I postulate a habitus-informed and field-conditioned theory of transference to enrich NI's spin-off thesis of 'diffusion'. I propose that while NI can benefit from BFT's potential of bringing social structure back into organizational research, BFT can enrich its social analysis by borrowing from NI's elaboration of the symbolic system of organizations.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Br J Sociol
          The British journal of sociology
          Wiley
          1468-4446
          0007-1315
          Jun 2016
          : 67
          : 2
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Sociology, Yale University.
          Article
          10.1111/1468-4446.12197
          27218878
          1efa6fd0-c851-44f6-9594-0dd86e84c8c2
          © London School of Economics and Political Science 2016.
          History

          Bourdieu,New Institutionalism,field,homology,isomorphism,organizations

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