The board of directors is considered as an instrument for dealing with the organization's environment. In a random sample of eighty nonfinancial corporations, elements of board size and composition are shown to be systematically related to factors measuring the organization's requirements for coopting sectors of the environment. Organizations that deviate more from an empirically estimated optimal board structure equation are likely to perform more poorly, compared to industry standards.
Founded in 1956 by James Thompson, the Administrative Science Quarterly is a peer-reviewed, interdisciplinary journal publishing theoretical and empirical work that advances the study of organizational behavior and theory. ASQ publishes articles that contribute to organization theory from a number of disciplines, including organizational behavior and theory, sociology, psychology and social psychology, strategic management, economics, public administration, and industrial relations. ASQ publishes both qualitative and quantitative work, as well as purely theoretical papers. Theoretical perspectives and topics in ASQ range from micro to macro, from lab experiments in psychology to work on nation-states. An occasional feature is the "ASQ Forum," an essay on a special topic with invited commentaries. Thoughtful reviews of books relevant to organization studies and management theory are a regular feature. Special issues have explored qualitative methods, organizational culture, the utilization of organizational research, the distribution of rewards in organizations, and critical perspectives on organizational control.
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Administrative Science Quarterly
© 1972 Johnson Graduate School of Management, Cornell University
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