Full text

Turn on search term navigation

Copyright Mackenzie Presbyterian University Jul/Aug 2016

Abstract

The purpose of this paper is to depict a theoretical proposal for analyzing the influence of three facets of an organization's dependence on the survival of interorganizational networks: on the environment, on the other members and on the network. This paper assists business leaders in showing the dependence tensions of enterprises on the market and networks. The understanding of relational changes and benefits provided by the network during its evolution also has an impact on enterprises' dependency. This paper is therefore original as it makes the contribution essential to a nascent stream of research. The conceptualization of this study is based on the Resource Dependence Theory to direct network survival. The methodology of the paper is based on a theoretical essay for the formation of an analytical background of the subject. It presents an insight in a manner that sheds light on the subject and sets the stage for future research. Does not apply. In this article, we did not make an empirical investigation. The conceptualization of this study has been based solely on the Resource Dependency Theory to direct network survival. Furthermore, additional research is needed to empirically validate the framework.

Details

Title
THE SURVIVAL OF INTERORGANIZATIONAL NETWORKS: A PROPOSAL BASED ON RESOURCE DEPENDENCE THEORY
Author
Klein, Leander Luiz; Pereira, Breno Augusto Diniz
Pages
153-175
Publication year
2016
Publication date
Jul/Aug 2016
Publisher
Mackenzie Presbyterian University
ISSN
15186776
e-ISSN
16786971
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1826886021
Copyright
Copyright Mackenzie Presbyterian University Jul/Aug 2016