Paradox as a Metatheoretical Perspective
University of Cincinnati · University of Delaware
Abstract
Organizations are rife with tensions—flexibility versus control, exploration versus exploitation, autocracy versus democracy, social versus financial, global versus local. Researchers have long responded using contingency theory, asking “Under what conditions should managers emphasize either A or B?” Yet increasingly studies apply a paradox perspective, shifting the question to “How can we engage both A and B simultaneously?” Despite accumulating exemplars, commonalities across paradox studies remain unclear, and ties unifying this research community weak. To energize further uses of a paradox perspective, we build from past reviews to explicate its role as a metatheory. Contrasting this lens to contingency…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 42.39
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 163
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Metatheory
- Perspective (graphical)
- Ambiguity
- Epistemology
- Contingency
- Autocracy
- Positive economics
- Sociology