Bureaucratic Hierarchy vs. Feudal Hierarchy: A Study on the Organizational Culture of China’s SOEs
- Tianyuan Yu
- Nengquan Wu
Abstract
Bureaucratic Hierarchy and Feudal Hierarchy are two confusing concepts in organization literature, especially inthe study of the organizational culture of enterprises in China. This article clarifies the two concepts in the first
place. Ralston et al. (2006) and Tsui et al. (2006) suggested that the dominant organizational culture of China’s
state-owned enterprises (SOEs) was Bureaucratic Hierarchy, consistent with Quinn and Cameron (1983)’s “life
cycles - criteria of effectiveness model”. However, according to Boisot and Child (1996)’s “Chinese and Western
paths to modernization” model, China’s SOEs are dominated by Feudal Hierarchy culture. This article proposes
that the dominant organizational culture of SOEs remains to be Feudal Hierarchy, and then critically examines
the literature to support this proposition. Finally, it points to key obstacles in the codification/modernization
process of China.
- Full Text: PDF
- DOI:10.5539/ijbm.v6n2p139
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
Journal Metrics
Google-based Impact Factor (2023): 0.86
h-index(2023): 152
i10-index(2023): 1168
Index
- Academic Journals Database
- ACNP
- AIDEA list (Italian Academy of Business Administration)
- ANVUR (Italian National Agency for the Evaluation of Universities and Research Institutes)
- Berkeley Library
- CNKI Scholar
- COPAC
- EBSCOhost
- Electronic Journals Library
- Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek (EZB)
- EuroPub Database
- Excellence in Research for Australia (ERA)
- Genamics JournalSeek
- GETIT@YALE (Yale University Library)
- IBZ Online
- JournalTOCs
- Library and Archives Canada
- LOCKSS
- MIAR
- National Library of Australia
- Norwegian Centre for Research Data (NSD)
- PKP Open Archives Harvester
- Publons
- Qualis/CAPES
- RePEc
- ROAD
- Scilit
- SHERPA/RoMEO
- Standard Periodical Directory
- Universe Digital Library
- UoS Library
- WorldCat
- ZBW-German National Library of Economics
Contact
- Stephen LeeEditorial Assistant
- ijbm@ccsenet.org