this is an important book which pursues its thesis with passion, erudition and lucidity, seeking to restore formal organization as the proper object of our discipline and the guiding principle for organizational action. It demands to be read attentively and is the kind of monograph that restores one's faith in the willingness of some scholars today to engage with the big questions facing the discipline. It especially demands to be taken seriously as an attempt to restore formal organization as a defence against arbitrary executive power, hype and pseudo-charisma.
Yiannis Gabriel, Organization Studies
This book really does need to be widely read. It is a thoroughly enlightening cultural account, throwing its illuminations upon many of the habits of thought that pervade academic, popular and government discourse.
Marilyn Strathern, Journal of Cultural Economy
Organization theory has suffered recently from justifiable criticisms of being monotheistically consumed by overly abstract theories that deny managerial agency and have contributed to its' growing irrelevance. Paul du Gay and Signe Vikkelso have written an important book that offers salvation. For Formal Organization offers a thoughtful realignment of organization theory. Using classic texts and practical contemporary questions the authors (finally) present a compelling argument for why we need more organization theory. This is an absolutely marvellous book.
Roy Suddaby, Professor and Winspear Chair, Peter B. Gustavson School of Business, University of Victoria
A work of stunning originality and yet paradoxically a reminder of the forgotten virtues and verities of classical organization theory. In this provocative book du Gay and Vikkelsø navigate a way out of many of the blind alleys of much recent work in the field. Lucid and scholarly, it deserves to become a landmark contribution to organization theory in the 21st century.
Christopher Grey, Professor of Organization Studies at Royal Holloway, University of London
This book fundamentally questions the direction of intellectual travel that organization theory has followed over the last half-century. By mounting a direct and sustained challenge to the, now dominant, 'metaphysical stance' and the theories it has legitimated, du Gay and Vikkelso offer a very different and distinctive conception of how 'organization' should be studied and practiced to that promulgated by new orthodoxies such as neo-institutional theory.
Mike Reed, Emeritus Professor of Organizational Analysis, Cardiff Business School
Early theories of organization had a practical aim of getting things done. This practical focus has long been displaced by a more metaphysical approach, at a cost of losing formal organization as an object of study. Du Gay and Vikkelso challenge us to recover the practical focus of organization theory for a world that increasingly needs what organization theory has to offer.
Gerald F. Davis, Gilbert and Ruth Whitaker Professor of Business Administration at The University of Michigan and author of The Vanishing American Corporation
For Formal Organization offers a detailed account of the need to approach Organization Theory from a formal point of view. The authors explain in minute detail the consequences of ignoring organizations' empirical (legal) reality. They show that the dominant metaphysical stance in Organization Theory leads to the creation of elaborate theoretical simulacra (such as the 'nexus of contracts' approach, or 'institutional fields') deemed to better represent reality than the formal view of organizations.
Jean-Philippe Robe, SciencesPo Law School