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City Branding to Solve Social Problems? : The Eigendynamik of management concepts

Rennstam, Jens LU ; Bertilsson, Jon LU and Sullivan, Katie (2024) In Organization Studies
Abstract
It is well known that management concepts tend to spread from corporate to public organizations. Branding is an example of such a concept, with suggestions that it can address not only economic but also social issues, often referred to as “inclusive branding.” This ethnographic study explores how branding is received and spreads in a Swedish city, and analyzes efforts to use branding to tackle inequality and segregation. Our findings reveal that the initial focus on social problems was glossed over in favor of following corporate branding ideals, but also that city communicators expressed critique, confusion, and doubt regarding the relevance of branding to their work. Surprisingly, this did not slow down but rather energized the branding... (More)
It is well known that management concepts tend to spread from corporate to public organizations. Branding is an example of such a concept, with suggestions that it can address not only economic but also social issues, often referred to as “inclusive branding.” This ethnographic study explores how branding is received and spreads in a Swedish city, and analyzes efforts to use branding to tackle inequality and segregation. Our findings reveal that the initial focus on social problems was glossed over in favor of following corporate branding ideals, but also that city communicators expressed critique, confusion, and doubt regarding the relevance of branding to their work. Surprisingly, this did not slow down but rather energized the branding process. Through an interactionist analysis, we suggest that rather than addressing social problems, branding in cities may give rise to an Eigendynamik, signifying a self-energizing inner dynamic fueled by a tension between “frames,” specifically between the branding frame and the civic frame of the city. This theorization lays the groundwork for contributions to the understanding of inclusive branding: it can start with good intentions to address civic issues but may get swept up in corporate branding concepts and activities that are ill equipped to deal with social issues. More generally, complementing established notions of translation
and colonization, our study provides a novel understanding of how management concepts migrate from corporate to public organizations through what we call frame-induced Eigendynamik. Overall, we contribute by shedding light on the role of self-energizing processes as reasons why organizational members engage with management concepts even when they struggle to see their relevance to their work. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
epub
subject
keywords
branding, cities, colonization, translation, eigendynamik, Ethnography, interactionism
in
Organization Studies
publisher
SAGE Publications
external identifiers
  • scopus:85203494789
ISSN
1741-3044
DOI
10.1177/01708406241273
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
c74e213c-95f1-4aea-94f2-adac40eaae25
date added to LUP
2024-09-18 20:56:33
date last changed
2024-09-20 09:59:53
@article{c74e213c-95f1-4aea-94f2-adac40eaae25,
  abstract     = {{It is well known that management concepts tend to spread from corporate to public organizations. Branding is an example of such a concept, with suggestions that it can address not only economic but also social issues, often referred to as “inclusive branding.” This ethnographic study explores how branding is received and spreads in a Swedish city, and analyzes efforts to use branding to tackle inequality and segregation. Our findings reveal that the initial focus on social problems was glossed over in favor of following corporate branding ideals, but also that city communicators expressed critique, confusion, and doubt regarding the relevance of branding to their work. Surprisingly, this did not slow down but rather energized the branding process. Through an interactionist analysis, we suggest that rather than addressing social problems, branding in cities may give rise to an Eigendynamik, signifying a self-energizing inner dynamic fueled by a tension between “frames,” specifically between the branding frame and the civic frame of the city. This theorization lays the groundwork for contributions to the understanding of inclusive branding: it can start with good intentions to address civic issues but may get swept up in corporate branding concepts and activities that are ill equipped to deal with social issues. More generally, complementing established notions of translation<br/>and colonization, our study provides a novel understanding of how management concepts migrate from corporate to public organizations through what we call frame-induced Eigendynamik. Overall, we contribute by shedding light on the role of self-energizing processes as reasons why organizational members engage with management concepts even when they struggle to see their relevance to their work.}},
  author       = {{Rennstam, Jens and Bertilsson, Jon and Sullivan, Katie}},
  issn         = {{1741-3044}},
  keywords     = {{branding; cities; colonization; translation; eigendynamik; Ethnography; interactionism}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{SAGE Publications}},
  series       = {{Organization Studies}},
  title        = {{City Branding to Solve Social Problems? : The Eigendynamik of management concepts}},
  url          = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/195399302/RennstamBertilssonSullivan_2024_City_branding_to_solve_social_problems-The_Eigendynamik_of_management_concepts.pdf}},
  doi          = {{10.1177/01708406241273}},
  year         = {{2024}},
}