Anne Reff Pedersen
Professor
Om
Primary research areas
The project highlights the tensions that emerge when established routines meet demands for change, and examines how healthcare professionals and managers make sense of and enact innovation. Rather than treating innovation as a purely technical or managerial process, the project conceptualises it as a deeply social and temporal phenomenon. By studying how innovation is woven into the lived realities of professionals and managers, the research generates new insights into the conditions under which healthcare innovation can be both effective and sustainable.
Research profile My research centres on organisation and innovation, with a particular interest in how change unfolds in everyday practices and how professionals navigate organisational complexity. I study how organising shapes, and is shaped by, people
What is the most important impact your research and academic work have on society?
The most important impact of my research lies in showing how innovation does not only emerge from large-scale reforms or managerial strategies, but also from the everyday practices of professionals and staff. By making these forms of frontline innovation visible, my work helps organisations and policymakers to better support adaptive and meaningful change. This contributes to more resilient healthcare services and more effective collaborations between public institutions and companies.
What are the societal or other challenges that you are working on solving?
I focus on the challenge of making innovation work across organisational and professional boundaries. In healthcare, this means addressing the tensions that arise when new technologies and reforms meet established routines. In different policy contexts, the broader challenge is how to bridge institutional divides in ways that respect professional expertise while also achieving societal goals and improve individual lifes.
What motivates you?
I am motivated by the creativity and resilience I see in users, professionals, managers and staff as they navigate organisational complexity. Their capacity to create new solutions in the midst of constraints and competing demands inspires me to study and understand how everyday practices can become drivers of innovation and change.
What is your vision or ambitions with your research and academic work?
My vision is to advance an understanding of innovation as a social and temporal process that unfolds in everyday work. I aim to provide knowledge that enables organisations to build on existing practices and relationships, rather than imposing change from above. Ultimately, my ambition is to contribute to organisations that are both professionally sustainable and societally valuable.
What are your academic interests?
I am especially interested in the intersections between organisation, innovation and narrative. My research combines organisational ethnography with narrative approaches, focusing on how professionals construct meaning across time and how stories shape organisational life. Much of my work centres on healthcare organisations, but I currently also study together with post doc. Mathilde H. Carlsen cross-sectoral local collaborations.
How does your research help companies and people?
My research helps companies, schools and healthcare organisations to better understand how collaborations can be sustained across institutional boundaries, and how innovation can be nurtured from everyday practices rather than only through top-down strategies. For people, it provides insights into how users, professionals and managers can find coherence, agency and purpose in times of change, thereby strengthening both their work and their organisations.
Five key themes in my research interests:
Everyday and frontline innovation – how employees and professionals develop new ways of working in their daily practices.
Organisational complexity and change – how organising shapes, and is shaped by, people, work relations and time.
Narrative approaches to organisations – how stories, narrative time and fragmented meaning-making create coherence, tensions and purpose.
Healthcare organisation and innovation – how technologies, reforms and cross-sectoral initiatives are negotiated and implemented in healthcare.
Cross-sectoral partnerships – particularly how public organisations and companies collaborate and reconfigure organisational boundaries
Publications
See all publications2024
Let’s Pack the Backpack Together
Rethinking Routines in Public Innovation as Interactions and Public Value Creation
Go to publicationaugust 2022
Working from Home
Findings and Prospects for Further Research
Stephan Kaiser
Stefan Suess
Rachel Cohen
Elisabeth Naima Mikkelsen, Associate Professor
Anne Reff Pedersen, Professor