Sage, D; Dainty, A and Brookes, N (2012) A strategy-as-practice exploration of lean construction strategizing. Building Research & Information, 40(2), pp. 221-230. ISSN 0961-3218
Abstract
A growing body of work emerging from the management and organizational studies literature is the Strategy-as-Practice (SaP) perspective, which focuses on the ways in which strategy is actually enacted within organizational settings. This perspective is used to examine the diffusion of lean construction. In recent years lean construction has grown in prominence to become one of the primary performative improvement recipes for the construction sector. However, rather than providing a stable strategy around which more collaborative, intelligent and efficient project-based organizations develop, this research reveals how the lean concept transforms during its journey with unintended organizational consequences. An ethnographic case study, informed by SaP, demonstrates how a lean strategy and its effects on organizational practice and culture cannot be understood separately from material and embodied practices and power effects. As well as contributing to the examination of lean construction practice, the findings show how strategy is enacted within construction organizations and the ensuing effects of social power. A new trajectory is opened for research into strategizing within construction organizations, which provides ways to explore actual practices and spaces where strategizing occurs.
Item Type: | Article |
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Uncontrolled Keywords: | construction strategy; contractors; industry change; lean construction; power; reflective practice; strategy-as-practice |
Date Deposited: | 11 Apr 2025 14:08 |
Last Modified: | 11 Apr 2025 14:08 |