TY - JOUR
T1 - Higher Education Institutions and Multistakeholders' Engagement
T2 - A Longitudinal Study of an Anchor Institution's Legitimacy and Dynamism
AU - Corazza, Laura
AU - Truant, Elisa
AU - Cottafava, Dario
AU - Dhir, Amandeep
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 1988-2012 IEEE.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - Higher education institutions (HEIs) often serve as the social glue of a community. They are place-bound institutions with strong regional ties that typically play a crucial role in shaping the socioeconomic development of local ecosystems. Although their role as anchor institutions - large institutions that impact community life and economies over generations - is clear, there are few studies on how these universities actually evolve. How do their structures change over time? And what, if any, are their strategies for maintaining their status as an anchor institution? This research presents a longitudinal case study spanning a seven-year period in the life of the University of Turin (UniTo), a large generalist university in Northern Italy. During this period, UniTo successfully transitioned from an ivory tower into an entrepreneurial university and a civically engaged institution embedded in its local region. Our analysis identifies the main challenges in evolving from one model to the other, along with the strategies used by UniTo to both face these challenges and maintain its status as an anchor institution. Our findings show that, in the HEI sector, an institution's organizational structures need to be dynamic. Structured, top-down relationships, such as those between the institution and the municipality, need to work in tandem with spontaneous, bottom-up one-to-one relationships. Overall, what emerges from this research is a new concept of legitimacy, called anchored legitimacy, that is built on both spontaneity and structuralism and persists over decades and centuries.
AB - Higher education institutions (HEIs) often serve as the social glue of a community. They are place-bound institutions with strong regional ties that typically play a crucial role in shaping the socioeconomic development of local ecosystems. Although their role as anchor institutions - large institutions that impact community life and economies over generations - is clear, there are few studies on how these universities actually evolve. How do their structures change over time? And what, if any, are their strategies for maintaining their status as an anchor institution? This research presents a longitudinal case study spanning a seven-year period in the life of the University of Turin (UniTo), a large generalist university in Northern Italy. During this period, UniTo successfully transitioned from an ivory tower into an entrepreneurial university and a civically engaged institution embedded in its local region. Our analysis identifies the main challenges in evolving from one model to the other, along with the strategies used by UniTo to both face these challenges and maintain its status as an anchor institution. Our findings show that, in the HEI sector, an institution's organizational structures need to be dynamic. Structured, top-down relationships, such as those between the institution and the municipality, need to work in tandem with spontaneous, bottom-up one-to-one relationships. Overall, what emerges from this research is a new concept of legitimacy, called anchored legitimacy, that is built on both spontaneity and structuralism and persists over decades and centuries.
KW - Anchor institutions
KW - higher education institutions
KW - multistakeholder engagement
KW - socioeconomic impact
KW - universities
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85159693622&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1109/TEM.2023.3265263
DO - 10.1109/TEM.2023.3265263
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85159693622
SN - 0018-9391
VL - 71
SP - 13572
EP - 13585
JO - IEEE Transactions on Engineering Management
JF - IEEE Transactions on Engineering Management
ER -