“…Structurally interorganizational collaboration involves stakeholders from multiple organizations or groups working toward solving a particular problem or advancing a particular vision (Gray, 1989;Keyton, Ford, & Smith, 2008;Stohl &Walker, 2002). Collaboration is not only a particular interorganizational structure but is also fundamentally discursive and communicative, foregrounding processes that are laden with egalitarian values such as horizontal hierarchy and shared decision-making (Gray, 1989;Keyton et al, 2008;Lewis, 2006). Indeed, early research emphasized egalitarian processes (Hardy, Lawrence, & Grant, 2005;Heath & Sias, 1999;Lewis, 2006); constructive conflict (Daniels & Walker, 2001;Heath, 2007); an overall cooperative ethos within civic decision-making environments (Hardy et al, 2005); and transparency, such as openly sharing agendas and turf (Huxham & Vangen, 2005;Leach, 2006;Moseley, 2001).…”