v11n1: Hargrave and Smith on Stakeholder Governance

Timothy_HargraveJeffrey_Smith

A COMMENTARY ON Flore Bridoux and J. W. Stoelhorst (2022), “Stakeholder Governance: Solving the Collective Action Problems in Joint Value Creation,” Acad Mgmt Rev 47(2): 214–236.

Abstract:

Bridoux and Stoelhorst (2022) employ Nobel laureate Elinor Ostrom’s institutional design principles to develop two models of stakeholder governance. They argue that these “community governance” models will help achieve a fairer distribution of stakeholder value compared withapproaches that centralize governance in the hands of management. We identify four characteristics, however, that thwart any straightforward application of these community governance models to business firms: ease of exit; lack of legacy social capital; heterogeneity of interests; and power imbalances. We then conclude, following Ostrom herself, that governance often requires external institutional arrangements that stakeholder theorists have not fully appreciated.

To download the full PDF, click here: Hargrave and Smith on Bridoux and Stoelhorst on Stakeholder Governance


Tim Hargrave is Associate Professor in the College of Business at Central Washington University. Jeffery Smith is Frank Shrontz Chair in Professional Ethics in the Albers School of Business and Economics at Seattle University



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