Learning Centre

The visible hands: An ethnographic inquiry into the emergence of food collectives as a social practice for exchange

 |  Login

Show simple item record

dc.contributor Aalto-yliopisto fi
dc.contributor Aalto University en
dc.contributor.advisor Räsänen, Keijo, Prof., Aalto University, Department of Management Studies, Finland
dc.contributor.author Kallio, Galina
dc.date.accessioned 2018-09-18T09:03:06Z
dc.date.available 2018-09-18T09:03:06Z
dc.date.issued 2018
dc.identifier.isbn 978-952-60-8167-7 (electronic)
dc.identifier.isbn 978-952-60-8167-0 (printed)
dc.identifier.issn 1799-4942 (electronic)
dc.identifier.issn 1799-4934 (printed)
dc.identifier.uri https://aaltodoc.aalto.fi/handle/123456789/34034
dc.description.abstract Motivated by an observation that new forms of organizing and alternative practices for exchange increasingly transpire outside formal organizations, this doctoral dissertation adopts a social practice approach to study how food collectives emerged as a new practice for exchange. In doing so it challenges the dominance of markets as the focal explanatory concept of economic organization and shifts attention from organization as an entity to organization as emergent order. In studying the emergence of a new social practice, the dissertation draws on extensive, indepth ethnographic fieldwork on Finnish food collectives conducted during 2010-2017. Foodcollectives comprise of groups of households that collectively procure local and organic food directly from farmers and other suppliers and distribute it among the participating members. The data originate from participant and non-participant observation, interviews, meetings, social media discussions, documents, and archival material. The empirical findings of the dissertation suggest that the emergence of food collectives as a new practice for exchange was predominantly a tactical rather than discursive accomplishment requiring people to invent their ways of doing while engaging in a bundle of activities andcontinuously re-connecting different elements, including materiality, temporality, meanings,and embodied skills that were in constant flux (Essay 1). The findings further point towardstemporal and moral ordering effects of emerging social practices. The study identifies rhythmic qualities that enable people to sustain their food collective’s web of practices (Essay 2) and evaluative work that anchors common values in food collectives’ practices (Essay 3). Capitalizing on four distinct practice theoretical approaches this study advances organizational scholarship, particularly the emerging body of literature examining alternative forms of economic organizing, and contributes to practice theory. The study finds that in order toemerge, new social practices not only involve new ways of knowing and doing, but also require people to unlearn dominant ways of knowing and doing. The study brings further attention to a web of practices and shows how social practices emerge by transforming interactional orders of existing practices and by re-connecting them in new ways. The study also raises important questions on the relationship between people and practices and offers methodological guidance for studying phenomena on emergence.As the market economy is being increasingly contested at grassroots, the challenge for policymakers is to understand and better acknowledge the role of alternative forms of economic organizing in the transformation towards a more sustainable economic system. en
dc.format.extent 94 + app. 124
dc.format.mimetype application/pdf en
dc.language.iso en en
dc.publisher Aalto University en
dc.publisher Aalto-yliopisto fi
dc.relation.ispartofseries Aalto University publication series DOCTORAL DISSERTATIONS en
dc.relation.ispartofseries 170/2018
dc.relation.haspart [Publication 1]: Kallio, Galina; Granqvist, Nina. Emergence of practice for exchange. Published in: Academy of Management Proceedings, 2015, Vol. 2015, No. 1, p. 17312. DOI: 10.5465/ambpp.2015.17312abstract
dc.relation.haspart [Publication 2]: Kallio, Galina; Sele, Kathrin. Practice(d) time as rhythmic organizing. Unpublished essay.
dc.relation.haspart [Publication 3]: Kallio, Galina. A carrot isn’t a carrot isn’t a carrot: Assessing value in food collectives. Unpublished essay.
dc.relation.haspart [Publication 4]: Granqvist, Nina; Kallio, Galina; Nissilä, Heli. Doing qualitative research on emerging fields and markets. In: Mir, R. & Jain, S. (Eds.) The Routledge Companion to Qualitative Research in Organization Studies. 2017, New York: Routledge.
dc.subject.other Management en
dc.title The visible hands: An ethnographic inquiry into the emergence of food collectives as a social practice for exchange en
dc.type G5 Artikkeliväitöskirja fi
dc.contributor.school Kauppakorkeakoulu fi
dc.contributor.school School of Business en
dc.contributor.department Johtamisen laitos fi
dc.contributor.department Department of Management Studies en
dc.subject.keyword social practice en
dc.subject.keyword alternative organization en
dc.subject.keyword food collectives en
dc.subject.keyword practice emergence en
dc.subject.keyword economic exchange en
dc.subject.keyword ethnography en
dc.subject.keyword organization studies en
dc.identifier.urn URN:ISBN:978-952-60-8167-7
dc.type.dcmitype text en
dc.type.ontasot Doctoral dissertation (article-based) en
dc.type.ontasot Väitöskirja (artikkeli) fi
dc.contributor.supervisor Granqvist, Nina, Prof., Aalto University, Department of Management Studies, Finland
dc.opn Feldman, Martha, Prof., University of California, USA
dc.rev Feldman, Martha, Prof., University of California, USA
dc.rev Croidien, Gregoire, Prof., Grenoble Ecole de Management, France
local.aalto.acrisexportstatus checked 2019-02-21_1247
local.aalto.formfolder 2018_09_17_klo_17_03
local.aalto.archive yes


Files in this item

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record

Search archive


Advanced Search

article-iconSubmit a publication

Browse

Statistics