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      The Logic of Tact: How Decisions Happen in Situations of Crisis

      1 , 2 , 3
      Organization Studies
      SAGE Publications

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          Abstract

          The mass migration of refugees in the fall of 2015 in Europe posed an immense humanitarian and logistical challenge: exhausted from their week-long journeys, refugees arrived in Vienna in need of care, shelter, food, medical aid, and onward transport. The refugee crisis was managed by an emerging polycentric and intersectoral collective of organizations. In this paper, we investigate how leaders of these organizations made decisions in concert with each other and hence sustained the capacity to act as collective. We ask: what was the logic of decision-making that orchestrated collective action during the crisis? In answering this question, we make the following contribution: departing from March’s logics of consequences and appropriateness as well as Weick’s work on sensemaking during crisis, we introduce an alternative logic that informed decision-making in our study: the logic of tact. With this concept (a) we offer a better understanding of how managers may make decisions under the condition of bounded rationality and the simultaneous transgression of their institutional identity in situations of crisis; and (b) we show that in decision-making under extreme pressure cognition is neither ahead of action, nor is action ahead of cognition; rather, tact explicates the rapid switching between cognition and action, orchestrating decision-making through their interplay.

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          Seeking Qualitative Rigor in Inductive Research: Notes on the Gioia Methodology

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            The Institutional Logics Perspective

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              Organizing and the Process of Sensemaking

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Organization Studies
                Organization Studies
                SAGE Publications
                0170-8406
                1741-3044
                February 2019
                December 07 2018
                February 2019
                : 40
                : 2
                : 239-266
                Affiliations
                [1 ]EM Lyon, France and University of Edinburgh Business School, UK
                [2 ]WU Vienna University of Economics and Business, Austria
                [3 ]WU Vienna University of Economics and Business, Austria and Copenhagen Business School, Denmark
                Article
                10.1177/0170840618814573
                9a0c3cd5-4eba-4bff-8622-8678f95f9d26
                © 2019

                http://journals.sagepub.com/page/policies/text-and-data-mining-license

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