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Edvik, Anders
Publications (10 of 14) Show all publications
Edvik, A., Holm, K. & Muhonen, T. (2025). Betydelsen av kall för organisatorisk och social arbetsmiljö. In: : . Paper presented at Forum för arbetslivsforskning (FALF) 2025. Hållbart arbetsliv i praktiken – forskning i samverkan, 9–11 Juni 2025, Borlänge.
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Betydelsen av kall för organisatorisk och social arbetsmiljö
2025 (Swedish)Conference paper, Oral presentation with published abstract (Other academic)
Abstract [sv]

Bakgrund Detta abstrakt fokuserar på betydelsen av att kunna leva sitt kall för organisatoriskoch social arbetsmiljö. Inom arbetslivsforskningen förstås begreppet kall hänga samman medtvå aspekter: en stark känsla av att vara menad för eller ha en djup inre motivation att utföraett visst arbete (att tjäna någon/några), samt möjligheten att kunna leva ut sin kallelse. Påsenare år har en växande mängd studier visat att känsla av kall är av betydelse för såväl individers arbetsrelaterade hälsa (Duffy et al., 2018) som upplevelse av arbetsmiljön (Mauno &Vianello, 2024). Medan forskning visar att kall har en positiv inverkan på arbetsrelaterad hälsa(Buis et al., 2024; Duffy & Dik, 2013; Thompson & Bunderson, 2019), visar andra studier attupplevelse av kall även kan riskera att överskugga bristande arbetsvillkor (Duffy et al., 2015).Detta abstrakt baseras på en studie av kyrkoherdars organisatoriska och sociala arbetsmiljö.Kyrkoherdens arbete kännetecknas i likhet med andra människobehandlande yrken av mångaoch nära kontakter med människor. Yrkesrollen relaterar även i hög grad till kall med tanke på kyrkans roll som en plats för religiös andakt och socialt stöd där anställda svarar på individers behov av tröst, hjälp och gemenskap. Svenska kyrkan som organisation medger härigenom förutsättningar för studie av hur olika arbetsmiljöfaktorer och hälsa i arbetet hänger samman med möjligheten att kunna leva sitt kall i arbetet. Syfte Studiens syfte var att undersökahur kyrkoherdar inom Svenska kyrkan upplever den organisatoriska och sociala arbetsmiljön.Med utgångspunkt i syftet kom studien att fokusera på följande frågeställningar: • Hur upplever kyrkoherdar sin organisatoriska och sociala arbetsmiljö? • Vilka samband finns mellanupplevelsen av den organisatoriska och sociala arbetsmiljön och upplevelsen av att kunna levasitt kall? Metod Studien genomfördes i samarbete med Svenska kyrkans arbetsgivarorganisation (Skao) och omfattade en digital enkätundersökning som riktades till samtliga anställdakyrkoherdar inom Svenska kyrkan. Datainsamlingen genomfördes under maj – juni 2024, ochprojektet avslutades med slutrapport den 27 mars 2025. Totalt besvarade 365 av 595 kyrkoherdar enkäten, vilket gav en svarsfrekvens på 61,3 procent. Undersökningen föregicks av beviljad etikprövning. Resultat Resultaten visade att upplevelsen av att kunna leva sitt kall relaterar positivt till ett flertal arbetsmiljöfaktorer såsom arbetstillfredsställelse, arbetsengagemang, inflytande, meningsfullhet, samstämmighet mellan personliga och organisationens värderingar, och självskattad hälsa. Resultaten ligger i linje med tidigare studier med fokus påkall, och kommer ytterligare att diskuteras med särskilt fokus på betydelsen av kall inom människobehandlande yrken och till hållbart arbetsliv.

National Category
Work Sciences
Research subject
Arbete och organisation; Organisational studies
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:mau:diva-77036 (URN)
Conference
Forum för arbetslivsforskning (FALF) 2025. Hållbart arbetsliv i praktiken – forskning i samverkan, 9–11 Juni 2025, Borlänge
Available from: 2025-06-12 Created: 2025-06-12 Last updated: 2025-06-12Bibliographically approved
Edvik, A., Flädjemark, U., Muhonen, T., Stavreski, H. & Westerdahl, S. (2024). Att organisera utmattningssyndrom: Om sjukskrivningsprocessen, patienters erfarenheter och rehabiliteringsstyrning. Lund: Forum för arbetslivsforskning, FALF; Institutionen för designvetenskaper (LTH), Lunds universitet; Centrum för tillämpad arbetslivsforskning och utvärdering (CTA) Malmö universitet; Institutionen för arbetsvetenskap, ekonomi och miljöpsykologi, SLU Alnarp (1)
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Att organisera utmattningssyndrom: Om sjukskrivningsprocessen, patienters erfarenheter och rehabiliteringsstyrning
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2024 (Swedish)Report (Other academic)
Abstract [en]

Föreliggande rapport har sin grund i projektet ”Att organisera utmattningssyndrom” vid Centrum för tillämpad arbetslivsforskning och utvärdering (CTA), Malmö Universitet. Projektet finansierades av Institutionen för Urbana studier och genomfördes mellan åren 2018 och 2022. Utgångspunkten var att sjukdomen som benämns utmattningssyndrom antar olika namn, tilldelas olika medicinska diagnoser och utgör en betydande samhällelig utmaning. Utmattningssyndromet har i Sverige tilldelats en specifik diagnos och kan därmed ge tillgång till sjukpenning och annan välfärd. Projektet har inte arbetat med medicinska eller terapeutiska antaganden ochkunskapsanspråk, utan sjukdomen betraktas utifrån olika organisatoriska perspektiv. Vi har därför varit intresserade av de processer på vårdcentraler och i andra sammanhang där en diagnos formas och som i sin tur bildar grund för såväl rehabilitering som återgång till arbete. Viktigt i sammanhanget är hur sjukdomen skiljer sig från etablerade somatiska sjukdomar, som exempelvis benbrott eller diabetes, genom att den är svår att diagnosticera, och dessutom är samhälleligt stigmatiserad. Rapporten fokuserar hur utmattningsdiagnosen aktualiserar osäkerhet och motsättningar i hälso- och sjukvården vilka i sin tur påverkar patienterna och som i slutändan blir politiska. Diagnosens kontroversiella roll i Sverige visas i kapitel två genom att företrädare för olika kunskapssyn på diagnosen kommer till tals. I kapitel tre redogörs för en annat perspektiv på utmattningsdiagnosen, där den i samhället för-givet-tagna arbetslinjen tas som avstamp för den praktiska organiseringen på arbetsplatser därden utmattningsdiagnosticerade arbetar. Inom projektets ram genomfördes en fältstudie med syfte att studera organiseringen kring utmattningssyndrom och denna ligger till grund för två delar av rapporten; kapitel två och tre. I projektet, dock utan specifikt fokus på diagnosen, har även en avhandling skrivits som har fokuserat organiseringen av funktionen rehabkoordinator inom hälso- och sjukvården. I kapitel fyra återfinns en fördjupning av denna funktion hur den vuxit fram och dess implementering genom dem som agerar i rollen. Rapporten inleds med en introduktion av övergripande syfte samt en beskrivning av sjukskrivningsprocessen inom det svenska trygghetssystemets ramar. Inledningskapitlet avslutas med att ge röst åt den som ofta hörs minst – patienten – i debatten om hur sjukförsäkringens regelverk kan beröra den som sjukskrivits. Vi introducerar därför vår rapport genom en autoetnografi om hur sjukskrivningsprocessen kan upplevas för densom drabbats.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Lund: Forum för arbetslivsforskning, FALF; Institutionen för designvetenskaper (LTH), Lunds universitet; Centrum för tillämpad arbetslivsforskning och utvärdering (CTA) Malmö universitet; Institutionen för arbetsvetenskap, ekonomi och miljöpsykologi, SLU Alnarp, 2024. p. 115
National Category
Work Sciences
Research subject
Arbete och organisation
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:mau:diva-70123 (URN)978-91-87521-32-4 (ISBN)
Available from: 2024-08-09 Created: 2024-08-09 Last updated: 2025-02-12Bibliographically approved
Mølbjerg Jørgensen, K., Trägårdh, T., Säwe, F., Edvik, A. & Björk, F. (2024). Gaian stories for a new humanity in management: A terrestrial ethics of organizing for sustainability. In: : . Paper presented at 40th EGOS Colloquium. Crossroads for Organizations: Time, Space, and People, subtheme: Ecological Insights on Sustainable Organizing: Bridging Organizational and Natural Sciences, 4 - 6 July 2024, University of Milano-Bicocca, Milan, Italy. (pp. 1-26). European Group for Organizational Studies
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Gaian stories for a new humanity in management: A terrestrial ethics of organizing for sustainability
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2024 (English)Conference paper, Published paper (Other academic)
Abstract [en]

Through reading Latour’s concept of the Terrestrial and Arendt’s concept of storytelling through one another, this article develops a terrestrial ethics for sustainability. This ethics is furthermore developed through reflecting on the work of The Marine Education Center in Malmö with sustaining Öresund, especially its visions of transforming this strait between Copenhagen and Malmö into a biosphere area. It is argued how the Terrestrial is a new location developed from the Gaia hypothesis. It implies that life on earth is inseparable from all other organisms living in the thin layer of matter on top of the earth. An implication of the Terrestrial is the focus on pre-human Gaian stories through which humans are Grounded in the processes and conditions of life. This radical move implies not only an unconditional focus on the stories of land, water, soil, flora and fauna before we begin to talk about their functional utility. It is also grounded in the belief that we do not and cannot control the processes of life. Being terrestrials can create another ground of humanity in managing. This ground implies tending to Gaia’s multispecies stories in the ways we make our stories. A terrestrial ethics is based on the curiosity, care and compassion for multiple lives that are not understood in terms of how they connect and relate to human stories. Such positioning can serve as a ground for a new humanity in managing.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
European Group for Organizational Studies, 2024
Keywords
Latour, Arendt, the Terrestrial, storytelling, Gaia, managing.
National Category
Other Humanities not elsewhere specified
Research subject
Organisational studies
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:mau:diva-71317 (URN)
Conference
40th EGOS Colloquium. Crossroads for Organizations: Time, Space, and People, subtheme: Ecological Insights on Sustainable Organizing: Bridging Organizational and Natural Sciences, 4 - 6 July 2024, University of Milano-Bicocca, Milan, Italy.
Available from: 2024-09-21 Created: 2024-09-21 Last updated: 2024-11-13Bibliographically approved
Muhonen, T., Serder, M., Erlandsson, M. & Edvik, A. (2023). From National Policy to Local Practices: Systematic Quality Work in Education from the Perspective of Local Authorities. In: : . Paper presented at ECER, European Conference on Educational Research, 22 - 25 August 2023, Glasgow, Scotland, UK..
Open this publication in new window or tab >>From National Policy to Local Practices: Systematic Quality Work in Education from the Perspective of Local Authorities
2023 (English)Conference paper, Oral presentation with published abstract (Other academic)
Abstract [en]

Over the last 20 years systematic quality work has become the main tool for developing Swedish schools (Håkansson & Adolfson, 2022). According to the Education Act (2010:800), quality work – at the local educational authority level as well as in the schools themselves – should be conducted in a systematic and continuous way, with respect to planning, follow-up, analyses, and actions taken to develop education. By continuous assessments and evaluations, the goal of the systematic quality work is to identify and address issues that need improvement for students to achieve the educational goals (Swedish National Agency for Education, 2012a). A review of the literature reveals the problematic aspects of evaluation practices and quality management, such as the risk to focus on what is measurable rather than what is desirable as well as the diverse definitions of quality (Lundström, 2015). However, what the local quality systems consist of, how they have been designed, and what practices and perceptions of quality they entail is less understood.

Previous research has primarily focused on individual schools’ quality work (Håkansson, 2013; Jarl, et al., 2017) , while less attention has been paid to the way the local educational authorities conduct systematic quality work. Thus, the aim of this study is to fill this knowledge gap by investigating how the ideas of systematic quality work in the Swedish Education Act's requirements are interpreted, translated, and materialized at the local education authority level.

The following research questions will guide our study:

1. How do local educational authorities interpret and translate the systematic quality work regulations and requirements in the Education Act?

2. How do these interpretations och translations materialize in the local quality work practices?

Theoretically we approach the phenomena of systematic quality management within the Swedish school sector from an organizing (Czarniawska, 2014) and practice-oriented perspective (Gherardi, 2019; Nicolini, 2009; 2012). These theoretical perspectives provide us a framework to analyse how the institutionalized ideas (as mental images that are well spread within the society) of systematic quality management - through authorities, policies, regulations, and quality models - are translated and materialized (Czarniawska & Joerges, 1996) into the local quality work organization and practices. The latter refers to the practices of doing and saying something related to the ideas of systematic quality management in different social contexts and time (Gherardi, 2019; Nicolini, 2009; 2012). Although the national guidelines involve the entire school system, these are interpreted, translated, and materialized by actors operating in a local context, which means that quality is understood in different ways and that the systematic quality work is conducted in different ways. An organizational perspective also includes aspects related to the tensions that arise when different interests and logics collide (for example between political, administrative, and professional interests and logics; see Czarniawska, 2014).

Methodology, Methods, Research Instruments or Sources UsedIn this project five Swedish municipalities have participated in a study of what systematic quality work means at a local education authority level and what practices materialize from the national regulations. At the heart of the study is the recognition that quality systems are locally designed to meet the national requirements, thereby allowing diverse interpretations and translations to occur.

The local education authorities can be understood as mediators, partly between state and municipal control, partly between needs and agendas at different levels in the chain of command. This understanding also characterizes the design of the study. The empirical data has been collected through three complementary methods: document studies, observations, and interviews. The document studies consist of analysing different central documents, e.g., quality reports, provided by the local education authorities covering the past two years. We have also observed meetings related to the systematic quality work (so called “quality-dialogues”). Besides the local education authorities, the key actors in these meetings were the principals, assistant principals, and teacher representatives of the school being followed up. 

The interviews were conducted with key persons in five different local Swedish education authorities individually by the authors. The duration of the interviews was approximately one hour, and they were conducted either face-to-face, via Zoom, or telephone. The interviews were based on an interview guide including questions about the participants’ role, their experiences, and activities in relation to the systematic quality work, the expected and actual effects, as well as challenges and potential for improvement of systematic quality work. The interviews were recorded with informed consent and were later transcribed verbatim.

All the research material described above is now gathered and will be analysed during the Spring 2023. As a tool for data analyses, we will apply Bacchi´s (2012) method “What is the problem represented to be?”.

Conclusions, Expected Outcomes or FindingsEqual education for all is includes three fundamental aspects: equal access to education, equal quality of education and the compensatory nature of education (Swedish National Agency for Education, 2012b). All students should receive an equivalent education, regardless of the area they live in, the socio-economic conditions they come from, or their functional variations. But study after study shows that Swedish students' schooling is not equal, and that who you are and where you live play a decisive role in the quality of the education you receive. Many of the last decade's school policy reforms and targeted initiatives have had as their overarching goal to address this lack of equality, so far with few concrete results. In order to break this trend, there has been an increasing focus on the local educational authorities’ responsibility for the individual school's shortcomings, quality, and development. Furthermore, lack of equality is a problem within rather than between different local educational authorities. Although there is paucity of research, the limited results show that schools are often isolated with their problems and that there is a lack of supportive structures and a functional systematic quality work (Jarl, et al., 2017; Swedish Schools Inspectorate, 2021).

The paper will present results from the ongoing study, results that we believe will have relevance both in the Swedish, Nordic and in a wider European context. Through our investigation we will contribute knowledge regarding how the National Educational Act's requirements for systematic quality work are interpreted, translated, and materialized at the local level, and how this in turn shapes, promotes or hinders the quality work of individual schools.

National Category
Pedagogy
Research subject
Organisational studies
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:mau:diva-63856 (URN)
Conference
ECER, European Conference on Educational Research, 22 - 25 August 2023, Glasgow, Scotland, UK.
Available from: 2023-11-24 Created: 2023-11-24 Last updated: 2025-01-09Bibliographically approved
Edvik, A. & Muhonen, T. (2022). A Work Environment Blind Spot: Exploring School Principals’ Organisational and Social Work Environments. Scandinavian Journal of Public Administration, 26(4), 47-71
Open this publication in new window or tab >>A Work Environment Blind Spot: Exploring School Principals’ Organisational and Social Work Environments
2022 (English)In: Scandinavian Journal of Public Administration, ISSN 2001-7405, E-ISSN 2001-7413, Vol. 26, no 4, p. 47-71Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

This article examines principals’ social work environment in the context of a series of school reforms inspired by new public management. With the point of departure in Job Demands and Resources, we put forward the following overall research question: which job demands and job resources are related to principals’ job satisfaction? The article has a mixed methods approach, combining material from questionnaires (466 participants) and interviews (15 participants). The results of the questionnaire indicate that job resources such as role clarity, influence, meaningfulness, and social community with senior managers were related to job satisfaction, while lacking job resources (influence, social community with senior managers) and experiencing role conflicts were associated with a higher intention to leave the profession. The interviews provide a more in-depth understanding of the shift of institutional logics within the school sector, enforcing boundaries between principals’ professional and managerial roles in accordance with New Public Managerial Ideas. The separation between profession and management contributes to principals’ organisational and social work environments being in a blind spot. This is not only a problem for the principals, but also a risk factor for the organisations themselves, as stress and ill-health among leaders tend to affect the entire organisation. 

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Göteborg: School of Public Administration, University of Gothenburg, 2022
Keywords
organisational and social work environment, working conditions, principals, Swedish school system, job demands-resources theory, professions, institutional logic
National Category
Work Sciences
Research subject
Organisational studies
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:mau:diva-56764 (URN)10.58235/sjpa.v26i4.10582 (DOI)2-s2.0-85151399728 (Scopus ID)
Available from: 2022-12-16 Created: 2022-12-16 Last updated: 2023-12-12Bibliographically approved
Edvik, A. & Muhonen, T. (2022). Being in a work environment blind spot – a study of school principals’ organizational and social work environments. In: FALF 2022 - Framtidens arbete – arbetets framtid: Book of abstracts. Paper presented at FALF 2022 - Framtidens arbete – arbetets framtid, Mälardalens högskola, 13–15 juni 2022 (pp. 16-17).
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Being in a work environment blind spot – a study of school principals’ organizational and social work environments
2022 (English)In: FALF 2022 - Framtidens arbete – arbetets framtid: Book of abstracts, 2022, p. 16-17Conference paper, Oral presentation with published abstract (Other academic)
Abstract [en]

Introduction

As part of the welfare sector, Swedish schools have undergone several reforms during the past few decades resulting in increasing and often conflicting demands on principals. Additional to implementing new grading systems and curricula, the sector has been impacted by market-oriented logic (new public management), resulting in a mix of professional and bureaucratic governance structures. Many of these reforms demand daily responses because principals are the key actors in both organizing and leading pedagogical practices, being the head of business and main respondent to local political initiatives. Hence, principals’ work environments have gradually deteriorated, with many experiencing high stress levels, which has led to high turnover and difficulty recruiting and retaining principals.  

Aim

Using JD-R theory as the point of departure, the aim of this study is to examine principals’ organizational and social work environment and attempt to answer the following research question: which job demands and job resources are related to principals’ job satisfaction and their intention to leave the job, and how do these job demands and job resources relate to changes within the institutional landscape as a result of the major political reforms the Swedish school sector has undergone over the last few decades?  

Method

We use a mixed methods approach combining responses to questionnaires (466 participants) and interviews (15 participants).  Participants were principals who were members of the school leader section (Lärarförbundet Skolledare) of the Swedish Teachers Union.  

Results

The questionnaire responses indicated that job resources such as role clarity, influence, meaningfulness, and social community with senior managers were related to job satisfaction, while a lack of job resources (influence, social community with senior managers) and role conflict were associated with higher intention to leave the profession. The interviews deepened the understanding of the shift in institutional logic within the school sector that has created boundaries between principals’ professional and managerial roles in accordance with new public management thinking. The separation of their professional and managerial roles has contributed to the development of a blind spot in principals’ organizational and social work environments. This is a problem for principals and a risk factor for the organizations themselves because stress and ill-health experienced by leaders tend to affect the entire organization. 

National Category
Work Sciences
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:mau:diva-63139 (URN)
Conference
FALF 2022 - Framtidens arbete – arbetets framtid, Mälardalens högskola, 13–15 juni 2022
Available from: 2023-10-13 Created: 2023-10-13 Last updated: 2023-10-13Bibliographically approved
Edvik, A., Geisler, M., Muhonen, T., Witmer, H. & Björk, J. (2020). Credence in the Organization's Ability to Respond to Change: Implications on Work Engagement and Job Satisfaction in the Church of Sweden. Frontiers in Psychology, 11, Article ID 995.
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Credence in the Organization's Ability to Respond to Change: Implications on Work Engagement and Job Satisfaction in the Church of Sweden
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2020 (English)In: Frontiers in Psychology, E-ISSN 1664-1078, Vol. 11, article id 995Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

As part of society, religious organizations are exposed to contextual conditions and challenges. However, adapting to external conditions is an act of balance since too much compromising may risk having a negative effect on employees' perception of organizational authenticity and, in turn, employees' well-being and attitudes toward work. In this study, we examined how specific characteristics of the work, in terms of job demands (role conflict and emotional demands) and job resources (influence at work and social community at work), as well as employees' credence in the organization's ability to respond to change, relate to employee well-being within the Church of Sweden. In total 2,112 employees (58% participation rate) answered a web-based survey. The results of regression analyses showed that job resources and credence in the organization's ability to respond to change provided a clear contribution to the explanation of variance in work engagement and, especially, job satisfaction. However, the contribution of job demands was less clear. Moreover, to further the understanding of the association between employees' credence in the organization's ability to respond to change and employee well-being, the mediating effect of job resources was tested. The results showed that the association between credence and well-being is in part mediated by job resources. In sum, the study demonstrate that employees' credence in the organization's ability to respond to change is important to consider for understanding employee well-being within religious organizations. In conclusion, our study suggest that organizations that are built up on strong values and institutionalized beliefs, such as religious and faith-based organizations, need to tread carefully in the process of adapting to conformal pressure for change. This, since the actions and choices of the organization are important for employees' credence in the organization and, in turn, employee well-being. Implications and recommendations for future research are discussed.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Frontiers Media S.A., 2020
Keywords
religious organizations, change, credence, job satisfaction, work engagement
National Category
Work Sciences
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:mau:diva-17856 (URN)10.3389/fpsyg.2020.00995 (DOI)000543836200001 ()32595552 (PubMedID)2-s2.0-85087040513 (Scopus ID)
Available from: 2020-07-28 Created: 2020-07-28 Last updated: 2024-10-04Bibliographically approved
Bohman, H., Edvik, A. & Fred, M. (2016). Nygammalt: rapport från områdesutveckling i Södra Sofielund/Seved, Malmö stad (ed.). : Malmö högskola
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Nygammalt: rapport från områdesutveckling i Södra Sofielund/Seved, Malmö stad
2016 (Swedish)Report (Other academic)
Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Malmö högskola, 2016. p. 78
Series
MAPIUS, ISSN 1654-6881 ; 20
National Category
Social Sciences
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:mau:diva-12972 (URN)20550 (Local ID)9789187997051 (ISBN)9789187997044 (ISBN)20550 (Archive number)20550 (OAI)
Available from: 2020-02-29 Created: 2020-02-29 Last updated: 2023-08-30Bibliographically approved
Björk, F. & Edvik, A. (2016). Organizing for urban farming: Knowledge sharing in cross-sectorial networks (ed.). Paper presented at Sustainable City Development 2016, Malmö, Sweden (2016-11-30 - 2016-12-02). Paper presented at Sustainable City Development 2016, Malmö, Sweden (2016-11-30 - 2016-12-02).
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Organizing for urban farming: Knowledge sharing in cross-sectorial networks
2016 (English)Conference paper, Oral presentation with published abstract (Other academic)
Abstract [en]

During recent years, urban farming has increasingly been regarded as an important strategic approach to sustainable urban development. The aspects that urban farming are said to aim towards spans the whole spectrum of urban sustainability – from access to healthy food to increased biodiversity and social cohesion (Cockrall-King 2012; Bendt, Barthel & Colding 2013). While projects and inspirational activities have largelly focused on farming itself, less attention have been directed towards organizational aspects. Managing and developing urban farming initiatives (often organized as non-profit organizations) means that organizations needs to navigate between and collaborate with a range of partners, many of whom are part of public administration. The diverse character of the organizations involved, and the different aims that these organizations have with urban farming initiatives, means that there will be colliding and contrasting institutional logics and rationalities. This may lead to conflicts, but can also promote innovation (Coule & Patmore 2013). Both for public administration and for urban farmers, access to knowledge is crucial to reach the aims of the initiative. Also, it is not uncommon that several public administration bodies have interest in the urban farming. A common response is to form loosely organized networks which include a wide range of actors. Sometimes, these networks may also achieve more formal status, such as the Guelph Wellington Food Round Table, in which the University play an important role (Hayhurst, Dietrich-O'connor, Hazen & Landman 2013) or the Toronto Food Policy Council, initiated by the health department of the City of Toronto (Blay-Palmer 2009). An interesting example of local governance, is Malmö Stadsodlingsnätverk. In 2011, environmental coordinators in one of the City of Malmö’s departments decided to call for a network meeting, where anybody who had an interest in urban farming could participate. Five years later, this loosely coordinated network is still active. It includes public servants, urban farmers, non-profit organizations, activists and others (Larsson 2015). This form of organizing in the field of sustainability is interesting in several ways. By not having a formal role, it is difficult to use the structure to excercise power. Rather, the structure enables an exchange of knowledge between peers. Relevant knowledge and engagement are the factors that give participants legitimacy. With no administrative structure, knowledge sharing can be extremely efficient but at the same time difficult to plan or control. Using concepts from Svensson & Von Otter (2001) this may be regarded as a network- or activation strategy. A key question, however, is to what extent this networked or activation strategy will work if urban farming in Malmö continues to grow and take new forms, such as more commercially oriented activities. Formalizing the structure might lead to a situation where competing institutional logics become more pronounced, and may lead to less knowledge sharing and de-legitimize the network. The aim of our presentation is to discuss aspects of organizing for sustainability, using examples from urban farming. We suggest that these forms of organizing, which have taken similar form in different contexts, may also be relevant for other fields of urban sustainability, where cross-sector collaboration and knowledge sharing are crucial. References: Bendt, Pim; Barthel, Stephan & Colding, Johan (2013). Civic greening and environmental learning in public-access community gardens in Berlin. Landscape and Urban Planning. No. 1, pp. 18-30. Blay-Palmer, Alison (2009). The Canadian Pioneer: The Birth Generics of Urban Food Policy in Toronto”.  Journal of International Planning Studies. No. 4, pp.401-416.  Cockrall-King, Jennifer (2011). Food and the City. Urban agriculture and the new food revolution. New York: Prometheus Books. Coule, T. & Patmore, B. (2013). Institutional logics, institutional work, and public service innovation in non‐profit organizations. Public Administration, vol. 91, no. 4, pp.980-997. Hayhurst, R., Dietrich-O'connor, F., Hazen, S. & Landman, K. (2013): Community-based research for food system policy development in the City of Guelph, Ontario. Local Environment: The International Journal of Justice and Sustainability, 18:5, 606-619 Larsson, A. (2015). Odling över gränser. Malmö: Stadsområde Norr Svensson, L. & von Otter, C. (2001). Projektarbete: Teori och praktik. Med sagan om diamanten som sprängdes, Stockholm: Santérus.

Keywords
sustainable development, urban farming, urban gardening, cross-sector collaboration, governance, institutional theory, organizational theory
National Category
Social Sciences
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:mau:diva-10912 (URN)27195 (Local ID)27195 (Archive number)27195 (OAI)
Conference
Sustainable City Development 2016, Malmö, Sweden (2016-11-30 - 2016-12-02)
Available from: 2020-02-29 Created: 2020-02-29 Last updated: 2022-06-27Bibliographically approved
Edvik, A. & Björk, F. (2016). Social Change Through Temporary, Short-term Interventions: The Role of Legitimacy in Organizing Social Innovation. In: Linda Lundgaard Andersen, Malin Gawell, Roger Spear (Ed.), Linda Lundgaard Andersen, Malin Gawell, Roger Spear (Ed.), Social Entrepreneurship and Social Enterprises: Nordic Perspectives (pp. 198-214). Routledge
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Social Change Through Temporary, Short-term Interventions: The Role of Legitimacy in Organizing Social Innovation
2016 (English)In: Social Entrepreneurship and Social Enterprises: Nordic Perspectives / [ed] Linda Lundgaard Andersen, Malin Gawell, Roger Spear, Routledge, 2016, p. 198-214Chapter in book (Refereed)
Abstract [en]

The literature on social innovation is growing quickly, covering many aspects of the phenomenon. However, in this chapter, we argue that organizational aspects of social innovation is a topic that deserves more attention. Using institutional theory, more specifically, the concept of legitimacy, the aim is to look at why project grants have become an important way of organizing social innovation processes, especially those that are structured around cross-sector collaboration. The argument is illustrated by five examples of initiatives working with social innovation and social entrepreneurship in the Region of Skåne in southern Sweden.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Routledge, 2016
Series
Routledge studies in social enterprise & social innovation
Keywords
social innovation, legitimacy, projects, social innovation ecosystem, penta helix
National Category
Social Work
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:mau:diva-9556 (URN)000468455300014 ()2-s2.0-85021095035 (Scopus ID)27200 (Local ID)9781138656260 (ISBN)9781138340091 (ISBN)9781315621982 (ISBN)27200 (Archive number)27200 (OAI)
Available from: 2020-02-28 Created: 2020-02-28 Last updated: 2025-02-04Bibliographically approved
Projects
Organisational and social safety climate in human service organisations – Developing proactive approaches and tools for research, practice and intervention; Malmö UniversityFrom policy to sick leave – the role of rehabilitation coordinators in governing the sick leave process; Malmö University
Organisations

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