Dilemmas and Discretion in Complex Organizations: Professionals in Collaboration with Spontaneous Volunteers During Disasters

Discretion is of major interest in research on professions. This article focuses on professionals’ discretionary reasoning about collaboration with spontaneous volunteers. By applying theories on discretion and institutional logics and drawing on disaster management research, we analyse interviews...

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Main Authors: Sofia Persson, Sara Uhnoo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Oslo and Akershus University College of Applied Sciences 2021-09-01
Series:Professions and Professionalism
Online Access:https://journals.oslomet.no/index.php/pp/article/view/3961
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spelling doaj-aa513c0dce5a4215b2965384c1ae71102021-09-06T12:35:02ZengOslo and Akershus University College of Applied SciencesProfessions and Professionalism1893-10492021-09-0111110.7577/pp.3961Dilemmas and Discretion in Complex Organizations: Professionals in Collaboration with Spontaneous Volunteers During DisastersSofia Persson0Sara Uhnoo1University of GothenburgUniversity of Gothenburg Discretion is of major interest in research on professions. This article focuses on professionals’ discretionary reasoning about collaboration with spontaneous volunteers. By applying theories on discretion and institutional logics and drawing on disaster management research, we analyse interviews with fire and rescue service professionals involved in managing a large-scale forest fire in Sweden. We identify five major dilemmas concerning the involvement of spontaneous volunteers in the official disaster response and analyse the influence on professional reasoning of multiple institutional logics (professional, citizen, bureaucratic and market) embedded in the emergency organization. The analytical framework connects structure and agency by linking institutional logics to discretional reasoning, and the findings clarify professional emergency responders’ perspectives on the opportunities and challenges of involving spontaneous volunteers in an operation. https://journals.oslomet.no/index.php/pp/article/view/3961
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sofia Persson
Sara Uhnoo
spellingShingle Sofia Persson
Sara Uhnoo
Dilemmas and Discretion in Complex Organizations: Professionals in Collaboration with Spontaneous Volunteers During Disasters
Professions and Professionalism
author_facet Sofia Persson
Sara Uhnoo
author_sort Sofia Persson
title Dilemmas and Discretion in Complex Organizations: Professionals in Collaboration with Spontaneous Volunteers During Disasters
title_short Dilemmas and Discretion in Complex Organizations: Professionals in Collaboration with Spontaneous Volunteers During Disasters
title_full Dilemmas and Discretion in Complex Organizations: Professionals in Collaboration with Spontaneous Volunteers During Disasters
title_fullStr Dilemmas and Discretion in Complex Organizations: Professionals in Collaboration with Spontaneous Volunteers During Disasters
title_full_unstemmed Dilemmas and Discretion in Complex Organizations: Professionals in Collaboration with Spontaneous Volunteers During Disasters
title_sort dilemmas and discretion in complex organizations: professionals in collaboration with spontaneous volunteers during disasters
publisher Oslo and Akershus University College of Applied Sciences
series Professions and Professionalism
issn 1893-1049
publishDate 2021-09-01
description Discretion is of major interest in research on professions. This article focuses on professionals’ discretionary reasoning about collaboration with spontaneous volunteers. By applying theories on discretion and institutional logics and drawing on disaster management research, we analyse interviews with fire and rescue service professionals involved in managing a large-scale forest fire in Sweden. We identify five major dilemmas concerning the involvement of spontaneous volunteers in the official disaster response and analyse the influence on professional reasoning of multiple institutional logics (professional, citizen, bureaucratic and market) embedded in the emergency organization. The analytical framework connects structure and agency by linking institutional logics to discretional reasoning, and the findings clarify professional emergency responders’ perspectives on the opportunities and challenges of involving spontaneous volunteers in an operation.
url https://journals.oslomet.no/index.php/pp/article/view/3961
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