2024-2025 / SOCI9005-1

Introduction to the sociology of organizations

Duration

30h Th, 15h Lect.

Number of credits

 Bachelor in political sciences : general5 crédits 
 Bachelor in human and social sciences (New programme)5 crédits 
 Extra courses intended for exchange students (Erasmus, ...) (Faculty of social sciences)6 crédits 

Lecturer

Charline Jamar, Frédéric Schoenaers

Language(s) of instruction

French language

Organisation and examination

Teaching in the first semester, review in January

Schedule

Schedule online

Units courses prerequisite and corequisite

Prerequisite or corequisite units are presented within each program

Learning unit contents

Our intention is to provide conceptual keys to be able to observe and understand organizations, their functioning in its complexity, their internal structures and their environment, as well as the interactions and power games (cooperation and tensions) that take place there.

More generally, the analysis of organizations concerns the study of the different modes of functioning of organized human groups (companies, markets, associations, etc.). The understanding of these human groups must take into account their complexity and their environment. The concepts and methods of analysis that will be seen during the course will aim to raise awareness among students of their listening, observation and analysis skills of the realities of the world of work.

Table of contents:
1. General introduction to the founding works of the sociology of organizations
2. The bureaucratic phenomenon (the case of Monopoly) - Crozier
3. The local political-administrative system - Dupuy and Thoenig
4. Power and rule - Crozier & Friedberg
5. The sociology of translation - Callon
6. The sciences are long chains of references - Latour

 

 

 

 

 

Learning outcomes of the learning unit

Our goal is for students to master the organizational grids presented in class, via the founding concepts, and to be able to apply them to the world around them. At the end of the course, the student will be able to:

  • Master the organizational grids presented in the course;
  • Carry out research in certain scientific journals;
  • Read, use and master scientific articles;
  • Discuss scientific articles collectively;
  • Summarize scientific articles;
  • Present orally, in a group, a reading summary and produce a Powerpoint;
  • Issue a critical reading, argue;
  • Establish links between original texts and concepts seen in class.

     
 

Prerequisite knowledge and skills

None. The course is aimed at a bachelor's or bridge student audience. It provides an important basis for following the "Sociologie de l'action organisée" course, offered in the master's program.

 

Planned learning activities and teaching methods

Teaching methods are divided into 3 categories:

  • Sessions dedicated to the presentation of theoretical elements and key concepts of the sociology of organizations;
  • Scientific readings, based on the reading portfolio;
  • Group work to prepare presentations in front of the class.
The lecture sessions are given only in person.

 

Mode of delivery (face to face, distance learning, hybrid learning)

Face-to-face course


Further information:

CALENDAR:

19/09: face-to-face concept courses - theoretical session

26/09: face-to-face concept courses - theoretical session

03/10: face-to-face concept courses - theoretical session

10/10: face-to-face concept courses - theoretical session

17/10: presentations of group work

24/10: presentations of group work

31/10: no class

07/11: face-to-face concept courses - theoretical session

14/11: face-to-face concept courses - theoretical session

21/11: face-to-face concept courses - theoretical session

28/11: no class

05/12: presentations of group work

12/12: presentations of group work

 

 

Course materials and recommended or required readings

Platform(s) used for course materials:
- eCampus
- MyULiège


Further information:

All the texts in the reading portfolio as well as the distribution will be posted in ECampus (2 texts over the term will be to be read).

We advise students who wish to do so to obtain the following book: KUTY, O. & DUBOIS, C., De la valeur à la norme, Brussels, De Boeck, 2019 (pages 115 to 200). It covers the content of the theoretical sessions and can be found at the university presses (building B8).

The following books are optional:

  • NIZET J., PICHAULT F., Introduction to the theory of configurations, De Boeck, 2001
  • LATOUR, B., Enquête sur les modes d'existence : Une anthropologie des modernes, Paris, La Découverte, 2012
 

 

Written work / report

Continuous assessment


Further information:

In the first session:

We operate in continuous assessment via group work during the term, then a final personal assessment in January.

  • Continuous assessment: during the term, students will be asked, via group work, to read and analyze 2 scientific texts, which they will then have to present in front of the class. These texts will be related to the theoretical course sessions that will precede them. For the presentations, we ask students to provide us with a Powerpoint-type support, which must be submitted on the day of the presentation, at 9 a.m. at the latest on the dedicated ECampus page. These 2 presentations are graded out of 20, and together represent 50% of the final grade in January.
 

  • In-session assessment: in the form of personal work of 2 pages maximum, we ask students to ask ChatGPT a question of their choice. This question can be related to the course, to a concept, or be more general, but must be linked to the sociology of organizations in the broad sense. The idea is that students then come back to this answer to qualify it, criticize it, improve it. The evaluation criteria for this test are the originality of the question asked, the critical look given to the answer formulated by ChatGPT, the style and the spelling. This personal work will be submitted by Monday, January 6 at 11:59 p.m. at the latest, exclusively via the dedicated page on the ECampus platform. The final work represents 50% of the final grade for January.
In the second session:

We ask students to read, analyze and comment on an unpublished text. The requested format will no longer be a PowerPoint but a Word document, but the idea is to draw inspiration from what was done during the group work, individually.

Then, we ask, as in the first session, to ask ChatGPT a question. Here, the instructions remain the same as in the first session.

Both parts of the work must be submitted by August 18, 11:59 p.m. at the latest. They each represent 50% of the final grade.

 

Work placement(s)

Organisational remarks and main changes to the course

Changes compared to the year 2023-2024:

  • 2 scientific texts are to be read during the four-month period (and no longer 3)
  • The schedule of sessions has been modified
 

Contacts

charline.jamar@uliege.be

f.schoenaers@uliege.be

 

Association of one or more MOOCs