Critical Realism as a Framework

 
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Steve Vincent
Newcastle University Business School
 
Overview
 
This topic is about 
using
 Critical Realism [CR] as a framework
 
I asked myself the question: how do the conceptual parts of CR
combine to help us to develop and assimilate knowledge about the
[social] world?
 
Leveraging the lexicon: using CR and RST to bringing other theory
together in explanations [my examples]…
CR and the political economy of HRM
Bourdieu and the social structure of HRM consultant’s networks
 
CR as a framework
 
Going back to the beginning
[ontology again]:
 
 
 
 
 
 
How do we bridge the theoretical gap?
 
Our explanations need to be
theoretically informed and
empirically substantiated 
[Brannan,
et al. 2016]
 
The “problem” is that there is a lot of
theory out there, but CR can help
order and critique this theory.
 
So… let’s start by getting a sense
of order
Generalist Realist Ontology and
Generalist Realist Ontology and
Meta-Theory
Meta-Theory
Generalist Realist Social Theory
Domain-Specific Theory
 
(Realist rereading and assimilation of other “grand theory” such
as Bourdieu, institutionalism, structuration, the Frankfurt
School etc.)
 
[Adapted from Cruickshank, 2003]
 
(Parsimonious “middle range theories” that explain local events
in terms of relations between levels – or the macro and the
micro – e.g. within organisation theory: resource dependency
theory; labour process theory; institutional discrimination, etc.)
CR as a framework
 
(Ontological commitments - e.g. external universe, laminated
system, open system, emergence, causal powers, entities, etc.)
Domain-Specific Meta-Theory
 
(Implications of realist ontology for a generalist approach to
theorising the social domain - e.g. TMSA, morphogenesis, social
structure, cultural conditioning, reflexivity, etc.)
CR as a framework
 
We often develop our explanations through other pre-existing theories and
frameworks, and so we need to be open to 
theoretical pluralism 
and 
abduction
[retroduction, retrodiction, etc]
 
Abduction involves re-describing the social world within a more standardised
template of concepts [O’Mahoney and Vincent, 2014]
 
The effort of holding 
a variety
 of conceptual schemas up against the world and see which
ones “fits” or help build a theoretically informed and empirically substantiated explanation…
 
Realist social theory has emerged on this basis: a struggle to decide which
categories/theories are “less worse” for the purposes of explaining events in a way that is
consistent with ontological realism
 
Caveat: what follows is my take on some of the core concepts in realist social theory [RST] – or concepts
that I have used to form a framework.
 
CR as a framework
 
The 
social
 universe as constituted of a specific hierarchy of things: a “laminated
system” of 
irreducible
 layers [Bhaskar and Danermark, 2006]
 
We should try to reveal this laminated system via the parsimonious use of concepts
I will talk about social structures, organisations [and other meso-level entities], mechanism and
institution [see Fleetwood, 2015] and/or socio-cultural phenomena [Archer, 1988] and agency
[Archer, 1995]
 
Social structures:
… are constituted of 
latticework of internal relations between entities [agents/agencies] that
may enable and constrain (but do not determine) the plans and actions of agents who reproduce
and/or transform these relations’ (Fleetwood, 2015: 95)
 … are ‘collective practices, acceptances, 
positions
, rules, rights obligations and suchlike that are
emergent features of human actions and interactions and which relationally organise individuals
as communities’ [Lawson, 2019 – new emphasis].
 
 
 
CR as a framework
 
Culture:
 
The “collective property register”, which is contested and contains cleavages [Archer, 1988] which
emerge from differences in positional perspectives and the value differences these impel [Sayer,
2005]
 
Organisations:
 
A social class of 
social entity 
that has boundaries to establish membership, forms of internal
sovereignty within jurisdictions, and defined roles and responsibilities, which are often consciously
designed.
 
They contain their own cultures and practices, which govern their relations.
 
Organizations are ‘things in themselves’, which tend to endure and contain, transform and
transmute distinctive types of 
resources
 [people, machines, money, etc.]
 
Other meso level entities
: e.g. ‘norm circle’ [Elder Vass, 2010], family, village. [etc.]
CR as a framework
 
Mechanisms:
How entities [with causal powers] come together to affect events
Specific and identifiable relations of entities, which are neither organizations nor reducible to the powers of
any individuals or other social entities, but which are specifically causal in affecting emergence. They can be
within, between or without formal organisations [or other social entities]
 
They are meso-level phenomenon that can be know via middle range theory [e.g. institutional
discrimination: “glass ceilings” “sticky floors”]
 
Institutions:
Constitute a micro-level of customs, rules, norms, obligations, rituals and values (etc.), which can
be more or less formal [codified], consciously enacted or tacit [embodied, “hard wired”] – the
constitutive elements of cultures, and which are policed by norms circles.
 
Agency:
The specific causal power of people’s individual or collection practices – reflexive capacity [and
incorporated habits] – choices, projects, strategies
CR as a framework
 
Macro
 
Meso
 
Micro
 
Transcendent socio-cultural structures
[e.g. class, gender, ethnic or
international relations]
 
Organisations
 
Mechanisms
 
Reflexive agents
 (Archer)
 
Institutions
 
Causation operates “up” and “down” this
laminated order, for example:
 
Upwardly: e.g. agents reauthor
institutions, which affect the
emergence of social mechanisms and
organisational processes.
 
Downwardly: e.g. inter-organisational
systems impinge on organisational
resources, such as those available for
investment in people’s abilities
 
[see Vincent and Wapshot, 2014]
 
So, how do the conceptual parts of CR combine to enable us to
develop knowledge about the [social] world?
 
The commitment to depth, alone, makes theoretical synthesis a vital part of the research process –
its about aligning theoretical lenses to reveal the unseen causal formations.
 
Results in researchers asking “transcendental questions”: what are the conditional possibilities of
“things” happening as observed and not otherwise?
 
You are seeking a “better” [deeper, more useful, predictive] explanation of the essential nature of the generative
structure or fabric that accounts for a given thing happening as it does an not otherwise!
 
You are trying to develop a new explanation of events that is both more adequate than previous explanations
and CR compatible with CR.
 
Arguably, RST is the process of a developing more parsimonious body of concepts that are rooted in CR ontology
and which can be applied to a range of social settings
 
The problem is to use this lexicon as “underlabourer” in your own studies – much depends on the
level [entity, discourse, tribe, policy] that takes your interest.
 
Leveraging the lexicon
 
And finally … using CR and RST to bring other theory together in explanations
Rereading domain specific concepts using realism
Immanent critique of “grand” theory
 
I think you have to immerse yourself within CR and RST as you do you own
research: the lexicon must become habituated within your own social theorising
 
My interest/field is work organisation: I am passionate about understanding the emergence
of inequitable economic systems and what can be done to ameliorate these!
 
I think the lexicon of realist social theory is always ever present in my mind when I think
about and try to describe the world.
 
 
Leveraging the lexicon
 
Vincent et al, (2020) theorise the political
economy of HRM with a relatively “tight”
correspondence between the RST lexicon
[e.g. laminated system, etc.] and the
emergence of Human Resource
Management [see also Edwards, 2005]
 
The RST lexicon is synthesised with
domain specific knowledge to describe
the social universe that HRM practices
are embedded within [the sum of
possible relations]
 
The outcome, they argue, is a more
complete picture of the specific
domain of study.
Leveraging the lexicon
 
RST can be used to consider what theories add to our understanding
of generative structures, and also for what the fail to do well:
 
Using RST to identify omission and synthesis additions
 
Example reading: Porter, S. (2015) ‘Realist Evaluation: an immanent critique’,
Nursing Philosophy
, 16: 239-251.
Leveraging the lexicon
 
Vincent and Pagan (2019) offer an immanent critique of Bourdieu using the RST lexicon
 
Bourdieu is GREAT! He explain just about everything in the social world in terms of a handful of
parsimonious
 concepts, and this is why he is so well cited!!
 
Field 
(of power and resources) [macro-level] and 
position
 [micro-level 1]
 
Forms of capital
 (economic, social, cultural, symbolic) as making fields “distinct” [meso-level 1]
 
Doxa
 – the “rules of the game” [viz. institution] which can be contested locally [meso-level 2]
 
Habitus
 – “structuring structures” or “feel for the game” - often tacit, but also strategic; deportments,
manners, accents, styles, (etc.) - includes reflexive struggle for what is at stake in the game [i.e. to contest
doxa] and 
illusio
 – one’s sense of investment in the game [micro-level 2]
 
The Bourdieusian hierarchy of concepts has a built in “layered” affinity with RST!
Leveraging the lexicon
 
In Bourdieusian scholarship, the meso-level (local social rules [doxa]
and forms of capital, which impel the “field of power”) is left as a
matter for local determination – as distinct to 
your
 setting
 
And yet, cultural capital and social capital are heterogeneous  and
emergent from ontologically various things (as embodied, signified,
collective recognised, instituted and organised).
 
How, then, do you unpack, explore and explain all this “social stuff”?
Unfortunately, this is where Bourdieu provides less help than one might
expect ….
Leveraging the lexicon
 
Arguably, as a consequence of this issue, Bourdieusian scholars rather gloss over
the field as an independent analytical category
 
Vincent and Pagan [2019] looked at the entrepreneurship research and failed to find one
paper that used more than a paragraph to reflect on the causal properties of fields
 
Bourdieusian scholars often prioritise agency [habitus/strategy] as “structuring structures”
over 
real structures
 [the 
field
], often asserting things like: ‘identities and external
environment get jointly and simultaneously co-created’ [De Clercq and Voronov, 2009].
 
In Archer’s [2003] terms, such analyses are guilty of 
central conflation 
– the failure to separate the causal
properties of the parts from the causal properties of the people.
 
We argue that 
central conflation is not necessary when using Bourdieusian concepts – it can
be corrected using CR concepts!
 
Leveraging the lexicon
 
Synthesis of Bourdieu’s and critical realists’ conceptual categories to study
resource distributions and flows:
 
Field (of Power)
 
Forms of Capital
 
Macro
 
Meso
 
Micro
 
Habitus
[including
reflexivity]
 
Transcendent socio-cultural
structures [e.g. class, gender,
ethnic or international relations]
 
Organisations
 
Mechanisms
 
Reflexive agents
 
Critical Realism
 
Bourdieu
 
Doxa
 
Institutions
Leveraging the lexicon
 
Vincent and Pagan [2019] combine realist and Bourdieusian middle
range concepts to study the networking of HRM consultants
 
They observed they networked at different times of day, in different places
with different types of people to access the resources [forms of capital] they
needed to develop their businesses.
 
They demonstrated different values in different settings depending on the
resources available.
 
Vincent and Pagan (2019) combine RST and Bourdieu to taxonomize
consultants’ social networking within a UK region.
 
Some other examples …
 
Al-Amoudi, I. (2007) ‘Redrawing 
Foucault
’s Social Ontology’, 
Organization
.
2007;14(4):543-563.
Brown, A., Fleetwood, S. and Roberts, J. (2002) 
Critical Realism and 
Marxism
, London:
Routledge.
Elder Vass, D. (2012) 
The Reality of 
Social Construction
,
 Cambridge: CUP.
Fairclough, N. (2013) 
Critical 
Discourse Analysis
: The Critical Study of Language
,
London: Routledge
Martinez Dy, A., Marlow, S. and Martin, L. (2017) ‘A Web of opportunity or the same
old story? Women digital entrepreneurs and 
intersectionality theory
’, 
Human
Relations
, 70(3), pp. 286–311.
Mingers, J. (2014) 
System Thinking
, Critical Realism and Philosophy: A Confluence of
Ideas
, London: Routledge
Pilgrim, D. (2019) 
Critical realism for 
Psychologists
, London: Routledge.
 
Final thoughts …
 
We found combining RST with Bourdieu allowed a sophisticated
resource informed perspective on the causal properties of social
structure.
 
Clearly, others use CR ontology and RST in different ways depending
on their point of interest – what they are trying to explain.
 
Do you have any questions?
To stimulate discussion, perhaps you can tell us how incorporating domain
specific ideas into a realist informed study, as well as to take any questions!
 
References:
 
Archer, M. (1988) 
Culture and Agency: The Place of Culture in Social Theory
, Cambridge: CUP
Archer, M. (2003) 
Structure, Agency and the Internal Conversation,
 Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Bhaskar, R. and Danermark, B. (2006) ‘Metatheory, interdisciplinarity and disability research: a critical realist perspective
’, Scandinavian Journal of Disability
Research, 
8(4): 278–297.
Brannan, M., Fleetwood, S., O’Mahoney, J. and Vincent, S. (2016) ‘Critical Essay: Meta-analysis: A critical realist critique and alternative
’,
 
Human Relations
,
70(1):11-39.
Cruickshank, J. (2003) 
Critical Realism: The Difference it Makes
, London: Routledge.
De Clercq, D. and Voronov, M. (2009) ’Towards a practice perspective of entrepreneurship: Entrepreneurial legitimacy as habitus’, 
International Small Business
Journal,
 27(4): 395–419.
Edwards, P. (2005) ‘The challenging but promising future of industrial relations: developing theory and method in context-sensitive research’, 
Industrial Relations
Journal
, 36: 264-282.
Elder-Vass, D. (2010) 
The Causal Power of Social Structures: Emergence, Structure and Agency
,
 Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Fleetwood, S. (2015) ’From labour market institutions to an alternative model of labour markets’, 
Forum for Social Economics,
 46(1): 78–103.
Lawson, T. (2019) 
The Nature of Social Reality: Issues in Social Ontology
, London: Routledge
O'Mahoney, J. and Vincent, S. (2014) ‘Critical Realism as an Empirical Project: A Beginner’s Guide’ in Edwards, P., O'Mahoney, J. and Vincent, S. [Eds.] 
Studying
Organizations Using Critical Realism: A Practical Guide
, Oxford: OUP.
Sayer, A. (2005) 
The Moral Significance of Class
, Cambridge: CUP
Vincent, S., Bamber, G. J., Delbridge, R., Doellgast, V., Grady, J., & Grugulis, I. (2020) ’Situating human resource management in the political economy: Multilevel
theorising and opportunities for kaleidoscopic imagination’, 
Human Resource Management Journal
, 30(4), 461– 477.
Vincent, S. and Pagan, V. (2019) ‘Entrepreneurial agency and field relations: A Realist Bourdieusian Analysis’ 
Human Relations
, 
72(2):188-216.
Vincent, S. and Wapshott, R. (2014) ‘
Critical Realism and the Organizational Case Study: A Guide to Discovering Institutional Mechanisms’
 in Edwards, P.,
O'Mahoney, J. and Vincent, S. [Eds.] 
Studying Organizations Using Critical Realism: A Practical Guide
, Oxford: OUP.
 
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This topic delves into the use of Critical Realism as a framework to develop knowledge about the social world, combining conceptual parts to bridge theoretical gaps and critique existing theories. It discusses ontological commitments, realist ontology, meta-theory, and domain-specific theories, emphasizing the importance of theoretical pluralism and abduction in constructing explanations. The goal is to offer a structured approach to understanding complex social phenomena.

  • Critical Realism
  • Framework
  • Social World
  • Theoretical Pluralism

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  1. Critical Realism as a Critical Realism as a Framework Framework Steve Vincent Newcastle University Business School

  2. Overview This topic is about using Critical Realism [CR] as a framework I asked myself the question: how do the conceptual parts of CR combine to help us to develop and assimilate knowledge about the [social] world? Leveraging the lexicon: using CR and RST to bringing other theory together in explanations [my examples] CR and the political economy of HRM Bourdieu and the social structure of HRM consultant s networks

  3. CR as a framework How do we bridge the theoretical gap? Going back to the beginning [ontology again]: Our explanations need to be theoretically informed and empirically substantiated [Brannan, et al. 2016] The problem is that there is a lot of theory out there, but CR can help order and critique this theory. So let s start by getting a sense of order

  4. CR as a framework (Ontological commitments - e.g. external universe, laminated system, open system, emergence, causal powers, entities, etc.) Generalist Realist Ontology and Meta-Theory (Implications of realist ontology for a generalist approach to theorising the social domain - e.g. TMSA, morphogenesis, social structure, cultural conditioning, reflexivity, etc.) Generalist Realist Social Theory (Realist rereading and assimilation of other grand theory such as Bourdieu, institutionalism, structuration, the Frankfurt School etc.) Domain-Specific Meta-Theory (Parsimonious middle range theories that explain local events in terms of relations between levels or the macro and the micro e.g. within organisation theory: resource dependency theory; labour process theory; institutional discrimination, etc.) Domain-Specific Theory [Adapted from Cruickshank, 2003]

  5. CR as a framework We often develop our explanations through other pre-existing theories and frameworks, and so we need to be open to theoretical pluralism and abduction [retroduction, retrodiction, etc] Abduction involves re-describing the social world within a more standardised template of concepts [O Mahoney and Vincent, 2014] The effort of holding a variety of conceptual schemas up against the world and see which ones fits or help build a theoretically informed and empirically substantiated explanation Realist social theory has emerged on this basis: a struggle to decide which categories/theories are less worse for the purposes of explaining events in a way that is consistent with ontological realism Caveat: what follows is my take on some of the core concepts in realist social theory [RST] or concepts that I have used to form a framework.

  6. CR as a framework The socialuniverse as constituted of a specific hierarchy of things: a laminated system of irreducible layers [Bhaskar and Danermark, 2006] We should try to reveal this laminated system via the parsimonious use of concepts I will talk about social structures, organisations [and other meso-level entities], mechanism and institution [see Fleetwood, 2015] and/or socio-cultural phenomena [Archer, 1988] and agency [Archer, 1995] Social structures: are constituted of latticework of internal relations between entities [agents/agencies] that may enable and constrain (but do not determine) the plans and actions of agents who reproduce and/or transform these relations (Fleetwood, 2015: 95) are collective practices, acceptances, positions, rules, rights obligations and suchlike that are emergent features of human actions and interactions and which relationally organise individuals as communities [Lawson, 2019 new emphasis].

  7. CR as a framework Culture: The collective property register , which is contested and contains cleavages [Archer, 1988] which emerge from differences in positional perspectives and the value differences these impel [Sayer, 2005] Organisations: A social class of social entity that has boundaries to establish membership, forms of internal sovereignty within jurisdictions, and defined roles and responsibilities, which are often consciously designed. They contain their own cultures and practices, which govern their relations. Organizations are things in themselves , which tend to endure and contain, transform and transmute distinctive types of resources [people, machines, money, etc.] Other meso level entities: e.g. norm circle [Elder Vass, 2010], family, village. [etc.]

  8. CR as a framework Mechanisms: How entities [with causal powers] come together to affect events Specific and identifiable relations of entities, which are neither organizations nor reducible to the powers of any individuals or other social entities, but which are specifically causal in affecting emergence. They can be within, between or without formal organisations [or other social entities] They are meso-level phenomenon that can be know via middle range theory [e.g. institutional discrimination: glass ceilings sticky floors ] Institutions: Constitute a micro-level of customs, rules, norms, obligations, rituals and values (etc.), which can be more or less formal [codified], consciously enacted or tacit [embodied, hard wired ] the constitutive elements of cultures, and which are policed by norms circles. Agency: The specific causal power of people s individual or collection practices reflexive capacity [and incorporated habits] choices, projects, strategies

  9. CR as a framework Transcendent socio-cultural structures [e.g. class, gender, ethnic or international relations] Causation operates up and down this laminated order, for example: Macro Upwardly: e.g. agents reauthor institutions, which affect the emergence of social mechanisms and organisational processes. Organisations Mechanisms Meso Downwardly: e.g. inter-organisational systems impinge on organisational resources, such as those available for investment in people s abilities Institutions Micro Reflexive agents (Archer) [see Vincent and Wapshot, 2014]

  10. So, how do the conceptual parts of CR combine to enable us to develop knowledge about the [social] world? The commitment to depth, alone, makes theoretical synthesis a vital part of the research process its about aligning theoretical lenses to reveal the unseen causal formations. Results in researchers asking transcendental questions : what are the conditional possibilities of things happening as observed and not otherwise? You are seeking a better [deeper, more useful, predictive] explanation of the essential nature of the generative structure or fabric that accounts for a given thing happening as it does an not otherwise! You are trying to develop a new explanation of events that is both more adequate than previous explanations and CR compatible with CR. Arguably, RST is the process of a developing more parsimonious body of concepts that are rooted in CR ontology and which can be applied to a range of social settings The problem is to use this lexicon as underlabourer in your own studies much depends on the level [entity, discourse, tribe, policy] that takes your interest.

  11. Leveraging the lexicon And finally using CR and RST to bring other theory together in explanations Rereading domain specific concepts using realism Immanent critique of grand theory I think you have to immerse yourself within CR and RST as you do you own research: the lexicon must become habituated within your own social theorising My interest/field is work organisation: I am passionate about understanding the emergence of inequitable economic systems and what can be done to ameliorate these! I think the lexicon of realist social theory is always ever present in my mind when I think about and try to describe the world.

  12. Vincent et al, (2020) theorise the political economy of HRM with a relatively tight correspondence between the RST lexicon [e.g. laminated system, etc.] and the emergence of Human Resource Management [see also Edwards, 2005] Leveraging the lexicon The RST lexicon is synthesised with domain specific knowledge to describe the social universe that HRM practices are embedded within [the sum of possible relations] The outcome, they argue, is a more complete picture of the specific domain of study.

  13. Leveraging the lexicon RST can be used to consider what theories add to our understanding of generative structures, and also for what the fail to do well: Using RST to identify omission and synthesis additions Example reading: Porter, S. (2015) Realist Evaluation: an immanent critique , Nursing Philosophy, 16: 239-251.

  14. Leveraging the lexicon Vincent and Pagan (2019) offer an immanent critique of Bourdieu using the RST lexicon Bourdieu is GREAT! He explain just about everything in the social world in terms of a handful of parsimonious concepts, and this is why he is so well cited!! Field (of power and resources) [macro-level] and position [micro-level 1] Forms of capital(economic, social, cultural, symbolic) as making fields distinct [meso-level 1] Doxa the rules of the game [viz. institution] which can be contested locally [meso-level 2] Habitus structuring structures or feel for the game - often tacit, but also strategic; deportments, manners, accents, styles, (etc.) - includes reflexive struggle for what is at stake in the game [i.e. to contest doxa] and illusio one s sense of investment in the game [micro-level 2] The Bourdieusian hierarchy of concepts has a built in layered affinity with RST!

  15. Leveraging the lexicon In Bourdieusian scholarship, the meso-level (local social rules [doxa] and forms of capital, which impel the field of power ) is left as a matter for local determination as distinct to your setting And yet, cultural capital and social capital are heterogeneous and emergent from ontologically various things (as embodied, signified, collective recognised, instituted and organised). How, then, do you unpack, explore and explain all this social stuff ? Unfortunately, this is where Bourdieu provides less help than one might expect .

  16. Leveraging the lexicon Arguably, as a consequence of this issue, Bourdieusian scholars rather gloss over the field as an independent analytical category Vincent and Pagan [2019] looked at the entrepreneurship research and failed to find one paper that used more than a paragraph to reflect on the causal properties of fields Bourdieusian scholars often prioritise agency [habitus/strategy] as structuring structures over real structures [the field], often asserting things like: identities and external environment get jointly and simultaneously co-created [De Clercq and Voronov, 2009]. In Archer s [2003] terms, such analyses are guilty of central conflation the failure to separate the causal properties of the parts from the causal properties of the people. We argue that central conflation is not necessary when using Bourdieusian concepts it can be corrected using CR concepts!

  17. Leveraging the lexicon Synthesis of Bourdieu s and critical realists conceptual categories to study resource distributions and flows: Bourdieu Critical Realism Macro Transcendent socio-cultural structures [e.g. class, gender, ethnic or international relations] Field (of Power) Meso Organisations Forms of Capital Mechanisms Doxa Institutions Micro Habitus [including reflexivity] Reflexive agents

  18. Leveraging the lexicon Vincent and Pagan [2019] combine realist and Bourdieusian middle range concepts to study the networking of HRM consultants They observed they networked at different times of day, in different places with different types of people to access the resources [forms of capital] they needed to develop their businesses. They demonstrated different values in different settings depending on the resources available. Vincent and Pagan (2019) combine RST and Bourdieu to taxonomize consultants social networking within a UK region.

  19. Some other examples Al-Amoudi, I. (2007) Redrawing Foucault s Social Ontology , Organization. 2007;14(4):543-563. Brown, A., Fleetwood, S. and Roberts, J. (2002) Critical Realism and Marxism, London: Routledge. Elder Vass, D. (2012) The Reality of Social Construction, Cambridge: CUP. Fairclough, N. (2013) Critical Discourse Analysis: The Critical Study of Language, London: Routledge Martinez Dy, A., Marlow, S. and Martin, L. (2017) A Web of opportunity or the same old story? Women digital entrepreneurs and intersectionality theory , Human Relations, 70(3), pp. 286 311. Mingers, J. (2014) System Thinking, Critical Realism and Philosophy: A Confluence of Ideas, London: Routledge Pilgrim, D. (2019) Critical realism for Psychologists, London: Routledge.

  20. Final thoughts We found combining RST with Bourdieu allowed a sophisticated resource informed perspective on the causal properties of social structure. Clearly, others use CR ontology and RST in different ways depending on their point of interest what they are trying to explain. Do you have any questions? To stimulate discussion, perhaps you can tell us how incorporating domain specific ideas into a realist informed study, as well as to take any questions!

  21. References: Archer, M. (1988) Culture and Agency: The Place of Culture in Social Theory, Cambridge: CUP Archer, M. (2003) Structure, Agency and the Internal Conversation, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Bhaskar, R. and Danermark, B. (2006) Metatheory, interdisciplinarity and disability research: a critical realist perspective , Scandinavian Journal of Disability Research, 8(4): 278 297. Brannan, M., Fleetwood, S., O Mahoney, J. and Vincent, S. (2016) Critical Essay: Meta-analysis: A critical realist critique and alternative , Human Relations, 70(1):11-39. Cruickshank, J. (2003) Critical Realism: The Difference it Makes, London: Routledge. De Clercq, D. and Voronov, M. (2009) Towards a practice perspective of entrepreneurship: Entrepreneurial legitimacy as habitus , International Small Business Journal, 27(4): 395 419. Edwards, P. (2005) The challenging but promising future of industrial relations: developing theory and method in context-sensitive research , Industrial Relations Journal, 36: 264-282. Elder-Vass, D. (2010) The Causal Power of Social Structures: Emergence, Structure and Agency, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Fleetwood, S. (2015) From labour market institutions to an alternative model of labour markets , Forum for Social Economics, 46(1): 78 103. Lawson, T. (2019) The Nature of Social Reality: Issues in Social Ontology, London: Routledge O'Mahoney, J. and Vincent, S. (2014) Critical Realism as an Empirical Project: A Beginner s Guide in Edwards, P., O'Mahoney, J. and Vincent, S. [Eds.] Studying Organizations Using Critical Realism: A Practical Guide, Oxford: OUP. Sayer, A. (2005) The Moral Significance of Class, Cambridge: CUP Vincent, S., Bamber, G. J., Delbridge, R., Doellgast, V., Grady, J., & Grugulis, I. (2020) Situating human resource management in the political economy: Multilevel theorising and opportunities for kaleidoscopic imagination , Human Resource Management Journal, 30(4), 461 477. Vincent, S. and Pagan, V. (2019) Entrepreneurial agency and field relations: A Realist Bourdieusian Analysis Human Relations, 72(2):188-216. Vincent, S. and Wapshott, R. (2014) Critical Realism and the Organizational Case Study: A Guide to Discovering Institutional Mechanisms in Edwards, P., O'Mahoney, J. and Vincent, S. [Eds.] Studying Organizations Using Critical Realism: A Practical Guide, Oxford: OUP.

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