Dennis Schoeneborn
Professor
Om
Primary research areas
I develop communication-focused explanations of organization
In my research, I develop communication-centered theories to explain organization and organizing phenomena. One upside of a communication-centered view is that it can help identify and explain organizing phenomena that occur beyond the boundaries of formal organization (e.g., hacker collectives, social media firestorms, etc.). I have added to this research area by putting forth the notion of organizationality (Dobusch & Schoeneborn, 2015; Schoeneborn, Kuhn & Kärreman, 2019), that is, the idea to consider organization as a matter of degree. In my current research I draw on this idea to explain how polarization "organizes" public discourses – and, in turn, how firms can navigate an increasing polarization of their communicative environment. Further research interests include how and under which conditions CSR/sustainability communication is likely to become performative, i.e. leads to its own fulfilment.
In my empirical research, I primarily employ qualitative methods to explore the communicative constitution of organization, organizing, and organizationality. In the same context, I follow a pragmatic methodological stance that allows for bridging qualitative-inductive with quantitative-deductive approaches if suited to the questions at hand.
My research has been published in the Academy of Management Review, Business Ethics Quarterly, Business & Society, Human Relations, Journal of Management Studies, Management Communication Quarterly, and Organization Studies, among other outlets. I used to serve as Associate Editor at Business & Society (2020 to 2023) and I currently serve as Associate Editor at Human Relations (since 06/2024).
Publications
See all publications16. juni 2025
The Past, Present and Future of the Corporate Actor
Ontological, Epistemological and Theoretical Considerations
Go to publicationjuni 2025
The Faroe Islands and the Oil That Never Was
Else-Fulfilling Prophecies and Organizational Change
Go to publication