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Navigating institutional complexity in socio-technical transitions

Miriam E. Hacker, Christian Binz

2021Environmental Innovation and Societal Transitions29 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Transitions from one socio-technical regime configuration to another entail long phases of institutional complexity, where two or more field logics co-exist in a sector and induce incompatibilities and frictions. This paper presents a dynamic phase model, which characterizes the types of institutional complexity that may build up and settle across various phases of a transition, illustrated with a case study from the diffusion of onsite water reuse in San Francisco. Results from semi-structured expert interviews and a focus group demonstrate that different forms of institutional complexity may follow each other in a transition trajectory and that formidable strategic agency is needed by the actors in a field in navigating prolonged phases of competing cultural demands. Gaining a more balanced perspective of both organizational and field-level reconfigurations may help better explain why transitions succeed in some places and fail in others.

Topics & Concepts

Sociotechnical systemAgency (philosophy)Perspective (graphical)Field (mathematics)Transition (genetics)Complexity theory and organizationsReuseInstitutional changeFocus (optics)SociologyBusinessKnowledge managementComputer scienceManagement scienceEconomic geographyPolitical scienceEconomicsPublic administrationMathematicsSocial scienceArtificial intelligenceEngineeringPure mathematicsOrganizational learningPhysicsBiochemistryOpticsGeneChemistryWaste managementSustainability and Climate Change GovernanceComplex Systems and Decision MakingInnovation and Knowledge Management
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