On Managing the Process of Global Network Legitimacy: A Chinese Company Perspective

Authors: Brian Low; Fred Jacobs; Wes Johnston

This manuscript combine concept from institutional and network theory to analyse and explain the currently observed behaviour of a Chinese telecommunication equipment company in securing their global network legitimacy. Legitimacy is garnered when the firm conforms to regulative processes, institutional norms and cognitive meanings within the international environment, without ignoring China’s institutional endowments and institutional stances. For practitioners, this manuscript shows how companies in latecomer industrialising countries can overcome the late mover position in establishing their legitimacy in a globally, embedded technological network dominated by firms in the advanced economies. For academics, it demonstrates the importance of state’s strong sense of protective paternalism in helping to construct competitive indigenous firms that could take on global giants. 

Journal: n.a. (n.a. – n.a.)

Web Address: n.a.

Publish Year: 2008

Conference: Uppsala, Sweden (2008)