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Exit, voice, loyalty, and … disobedience : When a CEO opposes his principal

Sardais, Cyrille ; Blom, Martin LU and Lortie, Josée (2021) In Corporate Governance: an international review 29(2). p.188-207
Abstract

Research Question/Issue: On the basis of a dynamic interrelation between the assumptions of agency theory and stewardship theory, this study seeks to make sense of disobedience at the highest corporate level. Departing from a processual view in order to better understand how loyalty plays a critical role in the relationships between a CEO and his/her principal, we propose a conceptualization of the options open to a top executive in disagreement with the principal. We view the relationship from “below” by primarily taking the CEO's perspective, resulting in a more complex view on how “duty” is perceived and acted upon by the CEO.

Research Findings/Insights: We use the rich and abundant archives left behind by the CEO of a... (More)

Research Question/Issue: On the basis of a dynamic interrelation between the assumptions of agency theory and stewardship theory, this study seeks to make sense of disobedience at the highest corporate level. Departing from a processual view in order to better understand how loyalty plays a critical role in the relationships between a CEO and his/her principal, we propose a conceptualization of the options open to a top executive in disagreement with the principal. We view the relationship from “below” by primarily taking the CEO's perspective, resulting in a more complex view on how “duty” is perceived and acted upon by the CEO.

Research Findings/Insights: We use the rich and abundant archives left behind by the CEO of a large French firm. We had access to over 50,000 pages of documents that allowed us to follow the CEO and his relationships with his principals, at times from day to day. We found two competing loyalties (loyalty to the principal—agency theory—and loyalty to the organization—stewardship theory) that gradually become independent of each other, triggering different responses in terms of “exits” from the relationship with the principal. This particular dynamic in which the CEO acted as a guardian of the overall purpose of the organization enabled the emergence, development, and consolidation of a disobedience process that over the years contributed to the well-being of his firm as well as to the social changes occurring in France at that time.

Theoretical/Academic Implications: This longitudinal study extends the corporate governance literature by offering a process-oriented approach, quite rare in this stream of research, and a more dynamic view of how agency theory and stewardship theory interact. Then, by providing empirical support for the idea that the disobedience process can protect and allow an organization to first evolve positively over time and eventually contribute to social improvements, our study proposes a form of responsible stewardship.

Practitioner/Policy Implications: This study offers important insights for executives, directors, and shareholders on how to make sense of, and in the long run potentially benefit from, disobedience at the highest corporate levels.

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Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
agency theory, chief executive officers, Corporate governance, government ownership, stewardship theory
in
Corporate Governance: an international review
volume
29
issue
2
pages
188 - 207
publisher
Wiley-Blackwell
external identifiers
  • scopus:85097867668
ISSN
0964-8410
DOI
10.1111/corg.12352
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
d342573c-951f-4518-b383-194253b875e6
date added to LUP
2021-01-11 09:29:08
date last changed
2022-04-26 23:13:53
@article{d342573c-951f-4518-b383-194253b875e6,
  abstract     = {{<p>Research Question/Issue: On the basis of a dynamic interrelation between the assumptions of agency theory and stewardship theory, this study seeks to make sense of disobedience at the highest corporate level. Departing from a processual view in order to better understand how loyalty plays a critical role in the relationships between a CEO and his/her principal, we propose a conceptualization of the options open to a top executive in disagreement with the principal. We view the relationship from “below” by primarily taking the CEO's perspective, resulting in a more complex view on how “duty” is perceived and acted upon by the CEO. <br/><br/>Research Findings/Insights: We use the rich and abundant archives left behind by the CEO of a large French firm. We had access to over 50,000 pages of documents that allowed us to follow the CEO and his relationships with his principals, at times from day to day. We found two competing loyalties (loyalty to the principal—agency theory—and loyalty to the organization—stewardship theory) that gradually become independent of each other, triggering different responses in terms of “exits” from the relationship with the principal. This particular dynamic in which the CEO acted as a guardian of the overall purpose of the organization enabled the emergence, development, and consolidation of a disobedience process that over the years contributed to the well-being of his firm as well as to the social changes occurring in France at that time. <br/><br/>Theoretical/Academic Implications: This longitudinal study extends the corporate governance literature by offering a process-oriented approach, quite rare in this stream of research, and a more dynamic view of how agency theory and stewardship theory interact. Then, by providing empirical support for the idea that the disobedience process can protect and allow an organization to first evolve positively over time and eventually contribute to social improvements, our study proposes a form of responsible stewardship. <br/><br/>Practitioner/Policy Implications: This study offers important insights for executives, directors, and shareholders on how to make sense of, and in the long run potentially benefit from, disobedience at the highest corporate levels.</p>}},
  author       = {{Sardais, Cyrille and Blom, Martin and Lortie, Josée}},
  issn         = {{0964-8410}},
  keywords     = {{agency theory; chief executive officers; Corporate governance; government ownership; stewardship theory}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{02}},
  number       = {{2}},
  pages        = {{188--207}},
  publisher    = {{Wiley-Blackwell}},
  series       = {{Corporate Governance: an international review}},
  title        = {{Exit, voice, loyalty, and … disobedience : When a CEO opposes his principal}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/corg.12352}},
  doi          = {{10.1111/corg.12352}},
  volume       = {{29}},
  year         = {{2021}},
}