A Multidimensional Model of Organizational Legitimacy: Hospital Survival in Changing Institutional Environments
Abstract
Using data on 143 hospital organizations, this article examines the antecedents and
effects of two forms of organizational legitimacy (managerial and technical) over
a 46-year period. Results show that both the managerial and technical forms provide
notable improvements in organizational survival chances but that the strength of each
effect varies over time depending on the nature of the institutional environment.
Variation also appears in the antecedents of legitimacy - for example, the ability
of a hospital to secure approval for its managerial practices depends on the correspondence
between its mission and the logic of the surrounding institutional environment. The
results suggest that a multidimensional model can reveal nuances of organizational
legitimacy that are missed by more unitary conceptions.•.
Type
Journal articleSubject
здравоохранениеуправление здравоохранением
социология организаций
health care management
organizational analysis
health care
организационный анализ
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/26624Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.2307/2393619Publication Info
Ruef, M; & Scott, WR (1998). A Multidimensional Model of Organizational Legitimacy: Hospital Survival in Changing
Institutional Environments. Administrative Science Quarterly, 43(4). pp. 877-904. 10.2307/2393619. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/26624.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Show full item recordScholars@Duke
Martin Ruef
Jack and Pamela Egan Distinguished Professor of Entrepreneurship
My research considers the social context of entrepreneurship from both a contemporary
and historical perspective. I draw on large-scale surveys of entrepreneurs in the
United States to explore processes of team formation, innovation, exchange, and boundary
maintenance in nascent business startups. My historical analyses address entrepreneurial
activity and constraint during periods of profound institutional change. This work
has considered a diverse range of sectors, including the organizational

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