The Lives and Deaths of Jobs: Technical Interdependence and Survival in a Job Structure
Author(s) -
Sharique Hasan,
JohnPaul Ferguson,
Rembrand Koning
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
organization science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.96
H-Index - 238
eISSN - 1526-5455
pISSN - 1047-7039
DOI - 10.1287/orsc.2015.1014
Subject(s) - interdependence , position (finance) , organizational structure , business , job attitude , job performance , labour economics , job design , work (physics) , job analysis , quarter (canadian coin) , public relations , economics , job satisfaction , management , sociology , political science , mechanical engineering , social science , archaeology , finance , engineering , history
Prior work has considered the properties of individual jobs that make them more or less likely to survive in organizations. Yet little research examines how a job’s position within a larger job structure affects its life chances and thus the evolution of the larger job structure over time. In this article, we explore the impact of technical interdependence on the dynamics of job structures. We argue that jobs that are more enmeshed in a job structure through these interdependencies are more likely to survive. We test our theory on a quarter century of personnel and job description data for the nonacademic staff of one of America’s largest public universities. Our results provide support for our key hypotheses: jobs that are more enmeshed in clusters of technical interdependence are less likely to die. At the same time, being part of such a cluster means that a job is more vulnerable if its neighbors disappear. And the “protection” of technical interdependence is contingent: it does not hold in the face of...
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