Article

Organizational Culture Beyond Consensus and Clarity: Narratives From Elite Sport

Details

Citation

McDougall M, Ronkainen N, Richardson D, Littlewood M & Nesti M (2020) Organizational Culture Beyond Consensus and Clarity: Narratives From Elite Sport. The Sport Psychologist, 34 (4), pp. 288-299. https://doi.org/10.1123/tsp.2019-0163

Abstract
In sport psychology, organizational culture is usually depicted as shared, consistent, and clear—the glue that holds people together so they can achieve success. There is, however, growing discontent in sport psychology with this idea of culture and extensive critiques in other academic domains that suggest this perspective is limited. Accordingly, the authors draw on narrative interviews with participants (n = 7) from different areas of sport and use Martin and Meyerson’s three perspective (integration, differentiation, and fragmentation) approach to culture alongside thematic analysis to reconstruct three “ideal cases” that exemplify each perspective. The findings emphasize a different pattern of meaning in each actors’ narrative and suggest the need to develop a broader, more inclusive concept of culture, so as not to minimize or dismiss cultural content that is not obviously shared, clear, or created by leadership; a course of action that can enhance both research and practice in the area.

Keywords
applied practice; conflict; interpretation; subculture

Journal
The Sport Psychologist: Volume 34, Issue 4

StatusPublished
FundersKeystone College
Publication date31/12/2020
Publication date online30/11/2020
PublisherHuman Kinetics
ISSN0888-4781
eISSN1543-2793

People (1)

Dr Michael McDougall

Dr Michael McDougall

Lecturer of Sport Psychology, Sport