Identity Brokerage and Nonprofit Community Building |
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Authors: | Dawn R. Gilpin Nina K. Miller |
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Affiliation: | 1. Walter Cronkite School of Journalism &2. Mass Communication, Arizona State University , Phoenix , Arizona , USA dgilpin@asu.edu;4. Herberger Institute for Design &5. the Arts, Arizona State University , Tempe , Arizona , USA |
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Abstract: | Scholars have increasingly approached organizations as complex systems with indeterminate, shifting boundaries. Boundaries in many nonprofit organizations may be especially fluid, given the heterogeneity of stakeholders and highly multiplexed relational and value characteristics involved in constructing identity. The present study frames nonprofit organizations as complex organizations seeking to build communities of legitimacy. Within these communities they construct their identity through a combination of boundary setting, or perceptions of the organization and in what ways it is distinct from other organizations and communities, and relationship building, through both interpersonal contacts and socially mediated interaction. These dimensions combine to allow organizations to identify and bridge structural holes in the larger network in which they are embedded, through processes of identity brokerage. These mechanisms have significant implications for driving growth and engagement in nonprofit organizations. In support of this theoretical model, the article describes a mixed-methods research study involving a nascent arts organization in a large U.S. city. |
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Keywords: | complexity identity community arts social media social network analysis |
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