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Racialized organizations, strategies, and structures: a case study

Charles D.T. Macaulay (Mark H. McCormack Department of Sport Management, Isenberg School of Management, University of Massachusetts Amherst, Amherst, Massachusetts, USA)
Ajhanai C.I. Keaton (Department of Health and Sport Sciences, University of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky, USA)

Sport, Business and Management

ISSN: 2042-678X

Article publication date: 29 April 2024

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Abstract

Purpose

This paper explores organization-level racialized work strategies for maintaining racialized organizations (Ray, 2019). It focuses on intentional actions to maintain dominant racial norms, demonstrating how work strategies are informed by dominant racial structures that maintain racial inequities.

Design/methodology/approach

We compiled a chronological case study (Yin, 2012) based on 168 news media articles and various organizational documents to examine responses to athlete protests at the University of Texas at Austin following the death of George Floyd. Gioia et al.’s (2013) method uncovered how dominant racial norms inform organizational behaviors.

Findings

The paper challenges institutional theory neutrality and identifies several racialized work strategies that organizations employ to maintain racialized norms and practices. The findings provide a framework for organizations to interrogate their strategies and their role in reproducing dominant racial norms and inequities.

Originality/value

In 2020, the Black Lives Matter (BLM) movement was reinvigorated within sporting and corporate domains. However, many organizations engaged in performativity, sparking criticism about meaningful change in organizational contexts. Our case study examines how one organization responded to athlete activists’ BLM-fueled demands, revealing specific racialized work strategies that maintain structures of racism. As organizations worldwide disrupt and discuss oppressive structures such as racism, we demonstrate how organizational leadership, while aware of policies and practices of racism, may choose not to act and actively maintain such structures.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

At the time of the issue publication date, Ajhanai C.I. Keaton, Ph.D., is an Assistant Professor in the Mark H. McCormack Department of Sport Management, Isenberg School of Management, University of Massachusetts Amherst.

Citation

Macaulay, C.D.T. and Keaton, A.C.I. (2024), "Racialized organizations, strategies, and structures: a case study", Sport, Business and Management, Vol. ahead-of-print No. ahead-of-print. https://doi.org/10.1108/SBM-05-2023-0067

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2024, Emerald Publishing Limited

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