“…One specific type of actor that the mediation literature rarely considers is the role of written texts (reports, letters, memos, etc.) in the composition of relations during mediation, even though research in fields ranging from linguistics to organization studies suggests that texts make a difference ( Latour, 1996 , 1999 ) in the ways human beings relate to each other, structure interactions, and enact social collectives (see Anderson, 2004 ; Asmuß and Svennevig, 2009 ; Brummans, 2007 , 2018 ; Brummans et al, 2020 ; Castor, 2018 ; Castor and Cooren, 2006 ; Chaput et al, 2011 ; Cooren, 2004 , 2008 , 2009 , 2015a ; Fauré et al, 2010 ; Hall and Butler, 2017 ; Jahn, 2018 ; Kameo and Whalen, 2015 ; Karlsson, 2009 ; Kuhn, 2008 , 2012 ; Meier and Carroll, 2020 ; Sergi, 2013 ; Smith, 2001 , 2005 ; Spee and Jarzabkowski, 2011 ; Svinhufvud and Vehviläinen, 2013 ; Vaara et al, 2010 ; Vásquez et al, 2016 ). Written texts, for example, dictate rules of conduct, give some people authority while depriving others of it, assist people in managing tensions or making decisions, or give organizations a constitutional basis.…”