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The Moral Side of M&A: Changing Morale Reflecting Moral Change?

Bringselius, Louise LU (2006) Annual Conference of the European Academy of Management (EURAM), 2006
Abstract
Is personnel resistance in deed as dysfunctional as it is assumed to be, in M&A theory? According to Hirschman (1970), voice is more loyal than exit, implying that employees telling their opinion should be understood as a sign of loyalty, rather than a problem. An important aspect of loyalty is its moral basis. Scanning M&A literature, it becomes evident that very little has been written on the moral aspects of M&A. A case study of a merger was conducted, with the purpose to understand the influence that moral aspects could have on morale (understood as an expression of personnel‟s sense of loyalty to the organization), using theory on the social/psychological contract and utilitarianism. Could a changing morale reflect moral... (More)
Is personnel resistance in deed as dysfunctional as it is assumed to be, in M&A theory? According to Hirschman (1970), voice is more loyal than exit, implying that employees telling their opinion should be understood as a sign of loyalty, rather than a problem. An important aspect of loyalty is its moral basis. Scanning M&A literature, it becomes evident that very little has been written on the moral aspects of M&A. A case study of a merger was conducted, with the purpose to understand the influence that moral aspects could have on morale (understood as an expression of personnel‟s sense of loyalty to the organization), using theory on the social/psychological contract and utilitarianism. Could a changing morale reflect moral change? The study showed that, in the beginning of the merger process, when the management style was democratic and open, management invited to a psychological contract with personnel. During the merger process, management gradually shifted to mainly utilitarian principles. Personnel assumed that the psychological contract was still valid and regarded management‟s new sense of reasoning as disloyal. Often, the purpose of personnel resistance was to make management return to the previous moral order. (Less)
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author
organization
publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Ethics, acquisitions, resistance, change management, mergers
host publication
[Host publication title missing]
pages
20 pages
conference name
Annual Conference of the European Academy of Management (EURAM), 2006
conference location
Oslo, Norway
conference dates
2006-05-17 - 2006-05-20
ISSN
1652-814X
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
ee000cbf-aecb-4469-a378-3e1267d52655 (old id 1546090)
date added to LUP
2016-04-04 09:10:48
date last changed
2018-11-21 20:51:18
@inproceedings{ee000cbf-aecb-4469-a378-3e1267d52655,
  abstract     = {{Is personnel resistance in deed as dysfunctional as it is assumed to be, in M&A theory? According to Hirschman (1970), voice is more loyal than exit, implying that employees telling their opinion should be understood as a sign of loyalty, rather than a problem. An important aspect of loyalty is its moral basis. Scanning M&A literature, it becomes evident that very little has been written on the moral aspects of M&A. A case study of a merger was conducted, with the purpose to understand the influence that moral aspects could have on morale (understood as an expression of personnel‟s sense of loyalty to the organization), using theory on the social/psychological contract and utilitarianism. Could a changing morale reflect moral change? The study showed that, in the beginning of the merger process, when the management style was democratic and open, management invited to a psychological contract with personnel. During the merger process, management gradually shifted to mainly utilitarian principles. Personnel assumed that the psychological contract was still valid and regarded management‟s new sense of reasoning as disloyal. Often, the purpose of personnel resistance was to make management return to the previous moral order.}},
  author       = {{Bringselius, Louise}},
  booktitle    = {{[Host publication title missing]}},
  issn         = {{1652-814X}},
  keywords     = {{Ethics; acquisitions; resistance; change management; mergers}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  title        = {{The Moral Side of M&A: Changing Morale Reflecting Moral Change?}},
  year         = {{2006}},
}