1998
DOI: 10.1016/s0169-2046(97)00103-5
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Evolution of USDA Forest Service organizational culture and adaptation issues in embracing an ecosystem management paradigm

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Cited by 43 publications
(37 citation statements)
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“…Employees are immersed, to greater or lesser degrees, in an organization's continually evolving cultural system -but even before they become members of an organization, they are also automatically and deeply enmeshed in the broader cultures of their community and society. As Aldrich (1999: 155-6) forests as production "machines" (Kennedy and Quigley 1998;Fairfax 2005), and its replacement with a more "organic" and participatory model of forest ecosystem management, required shifts in both external world-view and internal organizational culture.…”
Section: Organizational Culture and Resource Management Agenciesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Employees are immersed, to greater or lesser degrees, in an organization's continually evolving cultural system -but even before they become members of an organization, they are also automatically and deeply enmeshed in the broader cultures of their community and society. As Aldrich (1999: 155-6) forests as production "machines" (Kennedy and Quigley 1998;Fairfax 2005), and its replacement with a more "organic" and participatory model of forest ecosystem management, required shifts in both external world-view and internal organizational culture.…”
Section: Organizational Culture and Resource Management Agenciesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While these new policies highlighted the importance of ecologically informed fire management, they left unchanged the organizational incentives, budget priorities, and professional practices of agency land managers (Kennedy andQuigley 1998, Arno andAllison-Bunnell 2002, USDA Office of Inspector General 2006). Fire http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol15/iss3/art21/ suppression continued to dominate, with 98 percent of all forest fires suppressed regardless of ignition source (USDA Office of Inspector General 2006).…”
Section: Fire Management's Rigidity Trapmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, he argues that attitudes may influence job performance ''if the job is weakly definedthat is, there are few clear rules specifying how should be done and few strong incentives enforcing those rules'' (Wilson, 1989: 54). Also, attitudes founded on professional norms and organizational culture (i.e., the socializing influence of one's employer) may shape behavior (Kennedy and Quigley 1998).…”
Section: The Role Of Bureaucratic Structurementioning
confidence: 99%