Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
896221 | Scandinavian Journal of Management | 2008 | 11 Pages |
The article draws on publicly available data to analyse how, since the Rio Environmental Summit in 1992, the narration of the multinational oil company Shell have projected an evolution from an oil company identity to an identity also embracing renewable energies. In analysing the narrative battles over Shell's organisational identity the article contributes to the field of organisational identity theory. It does so by providing a rich description of the micro processes through which individual management actors seek by telling different evolutionary tales to get the larger corporate actor (organisational identity) to adapt to, or to manage, external social structures. The study to this end provides new insights into how different managers through talk can seek to advance or delay external stakeholders’ influences on relational organisational identities.