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http://hdl.handle.net/10791/499
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| Title: | IDENTITY AS BARRIER TO AND FACILITATOR OF CHANGE A CANADIAN PUBLIC SECTOR CASE STUDY |
| Authors: | Woods, William E W |
| Supervisor(s): | Dr. Kai Lamertz, Dr. Janice Thomas, Dr. Mark Crawford |
| Examining Committee: | Internal Examiners: Dr. Kai Lamertz, Dr. Janice Thomas, Dr. Mark Crawford, External: Dr. Bing Ran Penn State Harrisburg |
| Degree: | Doctor of Business Administration (DBA) |
| Department: | Centre for Distance Education |
| Keywords: | Imprinting, inertia, identity regulation, legacy identity, organizational change, government, organizational identity image, sensemaking, identity ambiguity |
| Issue Date: | 13-Jan-2026 |
| Abstract: | Increasing disruptions due to technological advancement, regulatory changes, and global
competition imply that organizational change is likely to increase in both volume and velocity.
This dissertation answers questions and provides insight for organizational leaders tasked with
managing change. The proposed research takes a balanced perspective about two views on
organizational identity; one that argues organizational identity is defined as that which is
enduring, and a second one that says organizational identity is alterable, fluid and can be
constructed, deconstructed, reconstructed, and maintained. A case study approach is used to
research identity change at Shared Services Canada from the perspective of those that have lived
through that change as internal members and as external clients. My goal is to examine the role
of legacy identity in a public sector/government organization’s transition to a shared services
business model. It addresses the question how does legacy identity help with a public
sector/government organization’s transition and/or impair transition to a hybrid organizational
form? |
| Graduation Date: | Dec-2025 |
| URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10791/499 |
| Appears in Collections: | Theses & Dissertations
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