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What is Structuration Theory

Handbook of Research on Consumerism in Business and Marketing: Concepts and Practices
The Theory defines all social practices (recurring actions) are regulated by interactions, norms and rules. These practices undertaken by individuals and social organizations within a social system, make possible the establishment of relations between social players. Such relations will evolve towards the adaptation of social actors' respective activities, that will contribute to change within the reference contexts involved and will be in turn affected by them.
Published in Chapter:
Consonant, Resonant and Social Relations between Firm and Consumer
Gianpaolo Basile (University of Salerno, Italy & Vitez University, Bosnia and Herzegovina)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-4666-5880-6.ch009
Abstract
The aim of this chapter is to propose a conceptual framework, based on an interdisciplinary approach, which integrates the Viable Systems Perspective, Institutional and neo-Institutional Theory and Structuration Theory with the Consumer Behaviour Theory. The reason for this is to show the relational dynamics between the firm-brand and the individual-consumer, and between these and the direct-indirect stakeholder. The chapter is based on the reflection that the consumption system can be thought of as having two levels. The first is a micro-level, where the consumption system is characterized by the momentum of the creation and maintenance of consonant relationships between the firm-brand and the individual-consumer in order to achieve mutual systemic viability. The second is a macro-level, characterized by the concept that relationships between firm-brand and individual-consumer influence both direct and indirect stakeholders. Within these relationships, according to Stakeholder Theory, it is therefore very important to consider the reciprocal influences the indirect stakeholder has on and receives from the relationships. The results of these relationships affirm the legitimate conditions on which sustainability requirements (economic, social and environmental) are based. For these reasons the proposed conceptual framework will analyze the firm-brand three-dimensional social role when it is engaged to create and/or maintain and/or guarantee a long term enduring relationship.
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More Results
Virtual Teams
A theory of societal processes on a high abstraction level. Adaptive Structuration Theory (AST) focuses on the analysis of the way existing technologies are taken up by groups and evolve in their role during the appropriation process (i.e., the process of adaptation to new technical tools, which changes the original situation).
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Structure Theory and Government IT
Originally developed by Anthony Giddens, structuration theory is an attempt to integrate micro and macro approaches to the study of society. Its basic premise is that individual actions are constrained by social structures, but, at the same time, these actions affect or constitute social structures.
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Bringing Out the Best in Virtual Teams
The richness of a medium is not static, but changes through the appropriation process or through how it is used (Ocker & Fjermestad, 2000).
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Grounding Principles for Governing Web 2.0 Investments
A sociological theory applied to the field of IS by, amongst others, Orlikowski (2000). The theory helps to describe how social structures, that is patterns of social interaction, are developed, changed or re-affirmed through a) users interacting with an IT artifact, and b) users attributing meaning to the technology by integrating the (non-)use into their work practices.
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Big Data, Semantics, and Policy-Making: How Can Data Dynamics Lead to Wiser Governance?
Aims to conceptualize the interplay in social systems as an inseparable and intricate “duality” explaining the production and reproduction of dynamic social structures as they coevolved with human interactions, over space and time.
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Pervasive Technologies and Addiction: How Workaholics Construct Boundaries for Recovery in a Digital Era
A social theory that human action and social structure exist through a recursive relationship; human action constitutes structure and, in turn, structure impacts how human actions are enacted.
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An Investigation into Doctors' Perceptions of Internet Informed Patients
Giddens’ structuration theory suggests there is a social structure (traditions, institutions and moral codes) that guide human behaviour. However, these structures themselves can be modified by human agency, for example by reproducing them differently or interpreting them differently or replacing them.
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Adapting the Structurationist View of Technology for Studies at the Community/Societal Levels
The theory of structuration was proposed by British sociologist Anthony Giddens in a number of articles in the late 1970s and early 1980s, culminating in the publication of The Constitution of Society in 1984. It is an attempt to reconcile theoretical dichotomies such as agency/structure, subjective/objective, and micro/macro. The approach does not focus on the individual actor or societal totality “but social practices ordered across space and time.”
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