Book contents
- Cambridge Handbook of Strategy as Practice
- Cambridge Handbook of Strategy as Practice
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Boxes
- Contributors
- Preface to the Third Edition
- Introduction: What Is Strategy as Practice?
- Part I Ontological and Epistemological Questions
- Part II Theoretical Resources: Social Theory
- Chapter 6 Structuration Theory: Giddens and Beyond
- Chapter 7 An Activity Theory Approach to Strategy as Practice
- Chapter 8 A Bourdieusian Perspective on Strategizing
- Chapter 9 A Wittgensteinian Perspective on Strategizing
- Chapter 10 A Foucauldian Perspective on Strategic Practice: Strategy as the Art of (Un)folding
- Chapter 11 A Narrativity Approach to Strategy as Practice: Strategy-Making from Texts and Narratives
- Chapter 12 Actor–Network Theory and Strategy as Practice
- Chapter 13 A Dramaturgical Framework for Strategy as Practice
- Chapter 14 Schatzki’s Practice Theory and Strategy as Practice
- Chapter 15 An Economies-of-Worth Perspective on Strategy as Practice: Dealing with Strategic Pluralism through Legitimation, Localization and Materialization
- Chapter 16 Strategy as a Performative Practice: A Self-Referential, Knowledge-Based Perspective
- Part III Theoretical Resources: Organization and Management Theories
- Part IV Methodological Resources
- Part V Substantive Topic Areas
- Index
- References
Chapter 14 - Schatzki’s Practice Theory and Strategy as Practice
from Part II - Theoretical Resources: Social Theory
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 March 2025
- Cambridge Handbook of Strategy as Practice
- Cambridge Handbook of Strategy as Practice
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Boxes
- Contributors
- Preface to the Third Edition
- Introduction: What Is Strategy as Practice?
- Part I Ontological and Epistemological Questions
- Part II Theoretical Resources: Social Theory
- Chapter 6 Structuration Theory: Giddens and Beyond
- Chapter 7 An Activity Theory Approach to Strategy as Practice
- Chapter 8 A Bourdieusian Perspective on Strategizing
- Chapter 9 A Wittgensteinian Perspective on Strategizing
- Chapter 10 A Foucauldian Perspective on Strategic Practice: Strategy as the Art of (Un)folding
- Chapter 11 A Narrativity Approach to Strategy as Practice: Strategy-Making from Texts and Narratives
- Chapter 12 Actor–Network Theory and Strategy as Practice
- Chapter 13 A Dramaturgical Framework for Strategy as Practice
- Chapter 14 Schatzki’s Practice Theory and Strategy as Practice
- Chapter 15 An Economies-of-Worth Perspective on Strategy as Practice: Dealing with Strategic Pluralism through Legitimation, Localization and Materialization
- Chapter 16 Strategy as a Performative Practice: A Self-Referential, Knowledge-Based Perspective
- Part III Theoretical Resources: Organization and Management Theories
- Part IV Methodological Resources
- Part V Substantive Topic Areas
- Index
- References
Summary
Davide Nicolini, David Seidl and Violetta Splitter provide yet another very useful theoretical perspective. They focus on Theodore Schatzki’s work and explain how it has been employed in strategy as practice research. This approach, rooted in Schatzki’s practice theory, is characterized by ‘flat ontology’, and it has proven to be a very fruitful source of inspiration and a theoretical foundation for strategy as practice scholars. Nicolini, Seidl and Splitter explain that this perspective gives ontological priority to strategy practices rather than practitioners, that it helps us to understand the embeddedness and situatedness of strategy practices in their social, institutional and organizational contexts, and that helps us to better understand linkages between bundles of practices in strategy and strategizing. This leads them to point to specific areas of application and offer implications and guidelines for future research using this approach in strategy as practice research.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Cambridge Handbook of Strategy as Practice , pp. 249 - 266Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2025
References
Acknowledgements
Davide Nicolini would like to acknowledge the hospitality of the Fannin Library, Phoenix College, Arizona (USA) when writing this chapter.