ORGANIZING FOR SOCIETAL IMPACT
Obiettivi formativi
This module is designed to engage students in the process of organizing, developing and implementing impactful projects aimed at addressing grand societal challenges. The module employs tools from the enquiry-based approach and applies them to pressing, complex, contemporary societal issues. As generating social impact implies practice, the course is heavily practice-based, allowing students to apply the tools and the thinking-like-a-scientist approach introduced in the class. Students will be immersed in an active-learning experience in the context of a real life project aimed at mitigating a societal challenge, within which they will have a first-hand account of how social goals can be synergistically integrated with and actually serve the original objectives of an organization.
Risultati di apprendimento attesi
Basic knowledge of business economics and management. Daft, R. L. (2015). Organization theory and design. Cengage learning - or similar contents from other handbooks).
Contenuti Del Corso
This course is designed to engage students in the process of organizing, developing and implementing impactful projects aimed at addressing grand societal challenges. The module employs tools from the enquiry-based approach and applies them to pressing, complex, contemporary societal issues. As generating social impact implies practice, the course is heavily practice-based, allowing students to apply the tools and the thinking-like-a-scientist approach introduced in the class. Students will be immersed in an active-learning experience in the context of a real life project aimed at mitigating a societal challenge, within which they will have a first-hand account of how social goals can be synergistically integrated with and actually serve the original objectives of an organization.
Testi Di Riferimento
Course materials, as reported week by week.
Further supplementary readings:
Cunha, M., Clegg, S., Gaim, M., & Giustiniano, L. (2022). Elgar Introduction to Designing Organizations. In Elgar Introduction to Designing Organizations. Edward Elgar Publishing.
Burton, M. R., Obel, B., & DeSanctis, G. (2011). Organizational Design: A Step by Step Approach, Cambridge.
Metodologie Didattiche
The course will make use of the following teaching methods:
• lectures
• working groups and case studies
• keynote speakers’ presentations on real life experiences
• presentations and assignment
Teaching activities integrate face-to-face lectures with the analysis of business cases performed by both the instructor and the students.
Students will be required to join practical sessions within small groups, taking part of a guided real life intervention on a societal problem.
These sessions, besides being part of a unique learning experience, are useful to evaluate student's ability to put into practice the methods of organizational design and analysis acquired during the lectures.
Modalità di verifica dell'apprendimento
The final grade will be based on the following:
• a continuous assessment based on a project developed by groups of students during the semester. Groups will be expected to collect, analyze, and interpret data related to a societal challenge, and take part of a real life intervention aimed at addressing such challenge. The activities inherent to the project contribute in total to 70% of the final grade. The activities will be divided into 4 "milestones", each of which will be evaluated independently by the teaching team of the course. Milestones will be organized as follows:
i) Quiz-Week 3; 20% of the final grade;
ii) Quiz-Week 5; 20% of the final grade);
iii) Evaluation of the groups (during coaching sessions) - weeks 6-10; 10% of the final grade);
iv) Assignment 3-Week 11; 20% of the final grade.
Evaluations will be weighted using “peer evaluation”, which will be adopted to prevent opportunistic behaviors while promoting effective group dynamics. Students will be free to decide their group affiliation, which in any case will be communicated to the "teaching team" at the beginning of the course.
• a final written exam, representing 30% of the final grade. The final exam consists of two open-ended questions related to one short case study (total duration 30 minutes).
Criteri per l’assegnazione dell’elaborato finale
Criteria:
The thesis assignment is based on a project presented by the student.
The project (2/3 pages) must include:
• Table of contents
• Abstract
• Main references
Settimana 1
Session 1 on campus
• Presentation of the course
• Understanding Organizations
Session 2 on line
• Key concepts of organizational design
READINGS (COMPULSORY):
• Chapter 2: The fundamentals of organizational design. Cunha, M., Clegg, S., Gaim, M., & Giustiniano, L. (2022). Elgar Introduction to Designing Organizations. In Elgar Introduction to Designing Organizations. Edward Elgar Publishing.
Settimana 2
Session 1 on campus
• Understanding Organizational Change
Session 2 on line
• Models of change
READINGS (COMPULSORY):
• Chapter 3: The fundamentals of organizational design. Cunha, M., Clegg, S., Gaim, M., & Giustiniano, L. (2022). Elgar Introduction to Designing Organizations. In Elgar Introduction to Designing Organizations. Edward Elgar Publishing.
READINGS (SUPPLEMENTARY):
• Kotter, J. & Rathgeber, H. (2006). Our iceberg is melting: Changing and succeeding under any conditions. Pan Macmillan.
Settimana 3
Session 1 on campus
• Understanding Societal Challenges
Session 2 on line
• Mission oriented-innovation policies vs system transformations
READINGS (COMPULSORY):
• Ferraro, F., Etzion, D., & Gehman, J. (2015). Tackling grand challenges pragmatically: Robust action revisited. Organization studies, 36(3), 363-390.
READINGS (SUPPLEMENTARY):
• Schot, J., & Steinmueller, W. E. (2018). New directions for innovation studies: missions and transformations. Research policy, 47(9), 1583-1584.
Settimana 4
Session 1 on campus
• Synergistic approaches for addressing societal problems
Session 2 on line
• How stakeholder management can help addressing societal challenges
READINGS (COMPULSORY):
• Porter, M. E., & Kramer, M. R. (2011). The big idea: Creating shared value. Harvard Business Review, 89(1)
• Menghwar P.S. & Freeman E. R. (2022) Stakeholder Theory. In Nair B. L.,
READINGS (SUPPLEMENTARY):
• Menghwar, P. S., & Daood, A. (2021). Creating shared value: A systematic review, synthesis and integrative perspective. International Journal of Management Reviews, 23(4), 466-485.
Settimana 5
Session 1 on campus
• Introducing the 5-week intervention
Session 2 on line
• Taming the paradoxes of society:
Food waste vs Hunger
READINGS (COMPULSORY):
• Daood, A. & Calluso, C. (2023). What about a non-profit platform? Bringing the right sides together against food waste and hunger. Luiss University Press.
Settimana 6
Session 1 on campus
• Intervention (guided working-in-group session)
Session 2 on line
• Individual coaching sessions for each group
Settimana 7
Session 1 on campus
• Intervention (guided working-in-group session)
Session 2 on line
• Individual coaching sessions for each group
Settimana 8
Session 1 on campus
• Intervention (guided working-in-group session)
Session 2 on line
• Intervention (guided working-in-group session)
Settimana 9
Session 1 on campus
• Intervention (guided working-in-group session)
Session 2 on line
• Individual coaching sessions for each group
Settimana 10
Session 1 on campus
• Intervention (guided working-in-group session)
Session 2 on line
• Individual coaching sessions for each group
Settimana 11
Session 1 on campus
• Project presentations
Session 2 on line
• Report delivery
Settimana 12
• Learning Journey and course wrap-up