2017/2018 KAN-CSOCV1023U Re-visiting the Commons, Re-imagining Collectives
English Title | |
Re-visiting the Commons, Re-imagining Collectives |
Course information |
|
Language | English |
Course ECTS | 7.5 ECTS |
Type | Mandatory offered as elective |
Level | Full Degree Master |
Duration | One Quarter |
Start time of the course | Second Quarter |
Timetable | Course schedule will be posted at calendar.cbs.dk |
Study board |
Study Board for MSc in Social Sciences
|
Course coordinator | |
|
|
Main academic disciplines | |
|
|
Last updated on 18-04-2017 |
Relevant links |
Learning objectives | ||||||||||||||||||||||
To achieve the grade 12, students should meet the
following learning objectives with no or only minor mistakes or
errors: By the end of the course, students should be able to:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
Course prerequisites | ||||||||||||||||||||||
This course is offered as part of the Minor in
Sustainable Entrepreneurship and Business. Other courses in this
minor are "Re-imagining Capitalism" and
"Re-imagining Environmental Entrepreneurship".
The course can be taken as a separate elective, but students will benefit from taking it together with the minor’s two other electives. |
||||||||||||||||||||||
Examination | ||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
Course content and structure | ||||||||||||||||||||||
This course familiarizes students with theories that take an interdisciplinary approach to and explores alternative ways of organizing.
The first block – Re-visiting the Commons - takes a point of departure in the work of political scientist Elinor Ostrom, winner of the 2009 Nobel Prize in economics. Her work offers a novel insight into what happens when both private sector firms and public sector organizations fail to organize collective goods (water, forests, fisheries) effectively, and how communities organize to solve their own problems—with varying degrees of success. Ostrom’s scholarship invites us to approach organizations in the broadest sense of the term, allowing us to analyze the limitations of the corporate organizational form and engage with cases where other forms of organizing seek to address those shortcomings. Against the backdrop of Ostrom’s scholarship, we will explore alternative forms of organizing: Informal networks, temporary coalitions and partnerships that fall under neither market nor hierarchy and that have proven highly productive.
The second block – Re-imagining the Collectives - picks up where the first block left and explores alternative organizational forms further. Taking institutional theory as a starting point, it engages with the critique launched at institutional theory that rather than assigning entrepreneurship to single – often heroic – individuals, it should be considered the result of collective endeavors. Engaging with institutional theory and its critics, we’ll explore creative collectives and their innovative potential working with cases of social and cultural entrepreneurship including: The shared economy; co-creation in the public sector critically exploring the roots to and creation of public value, and finally art movements analyzing the political role of art in society.
The course combines a variety of methods, ranging from traditional lectures, case studies, dialogue-based teaching, student debates, and group presentations. Students are expected to participate actively in class.
The present course is part of the series Advanced Studies Electives. It addresses students in the last year of their masters who are looking for inspiration for their master theses. The course will introduce cutting-edge research in the field of Institutional Entrepreneurship, Governance in the context of the Commons, Community Economies, including state-of-the-art research debates and questions for potential master theses.
The course is part of the Minor in Sustainable Entrepreneurship and Business. Although the course can be taken as a separate elective, students will benefit from taking it together with the Minor’s two other electives: “Re-imagining Capitalism” and “Re-imagining Environmental Entrepreneurship”. |
||||||||||||||||||||||
Teaching methods | ||||||||||||||||||||||
The course combines a variety of methods, ranging from traditional lectures, case studies, dialogue-based teaching, student debates, and group presentations. Students are expected to participate actively in class. | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Feedback during the teaching period | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Collective feed-back in class with the possibility of individual feed-back during office hours. | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Student workload | ||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
Expected literature | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Ostrom, Elinor. 1990. Governing the Commons: The Evolution of Institutions for Collective Action. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press Olsen, Mancur. 1971. The Logic of Collective Action: Public Goods and the Theory of Groups. Cambridge (Mas.): Harvard University Press Jessop, Bob. 2002. The Future of the Capitalist State. Cambridge: Polity Press Moore, Mark. 1995. Creating Public Value: Strategic Management in Government. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. Le Grand, Julien. 2003. Motivation, Agency and Public Policy of Knights & Knaves, Pawns & Queens. Oxford: Oxford University Press Alford, John. 2009. Engaging public sector clients. From service-delivery to co-production. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan Fligstein, Neil and McAdam, Doug. 2012. A theory of Fields. New York: Oxford University Press Powell, Walter and DiMaggio, Paul (eds.) 1991. The New Institutionalism in Organizational Analysis. Chicago: Chicago University Press Lawrence, Thomas et. al. (eds.) 2009. Institutional Work: Actors and Agency in Institutional Studies of Organizations. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
The course literature consists of chapters from the above listed volumes and furthermore journal articles that engage with specific cases. |