| Article ID: | iaor2010288 |
| Volume: | 21 |
| Issue: | 1 |
| Start Page Number: | 290 |
| End Page Number: | 305 |
| Publication Date: | Jan 2010 |
| Journal: | Organization Science |
| Authors: | Felin Teppo, King Brayden G, Whetten David A |
Organization theory is a theory without a protagonist. Organizations are typically portrayed in organizational scholarship as aggregations of individuals, as instantiations of the environment, as nodes in a social network, as members of a population, or as a bundle of organizing processes. This paper hopes to highlight the need for understanding, explicating, and researching the enduring, noun-like qualities of the organization. We situate the organization in a broader social landscape by examining what is unique about the organization as a social actor. We propose two assumptions that underlie our conceptualization of organizations as social actors: external attribution and intentionality. We then highlight important questions and implications forming the core of a distinctively