Bridging in network organisations. The case of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)

IF 2.9 2区 社会学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY Social Networks Pub Date : 2023-10-01 DOI:10.1016/j.socnet.2022.01.015
Tommaso Venturini , Kari De Pryck , Robert Ackland
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Abstract

In this paper, we investigate the relational architecture of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) focussing on the individuals that, in the thirty years of its existence, have assured the connection between its different components. To study relational bridging within the IPCC, we created a unique database of all the individuals who have contributed to the organisation since its establishment and noted in which workstream they participated (i.e., function + Working Group + Assessment Report). From this database we extract the participants-workstreams affiliation network and use it to compute several metrics of bridgeness, which we discuss, validate, and compare. We use these metrics to investigate the general distribution and evolution of bridging in the IPCC, but also to identify individuals who more actively provided connections between its authors and government representatives (functional bridges), its Working Groups (thematic bridges) and its assessment cycles (temporal bridges). Focussing on the role of key bridge individuals and their trajectories within the organisation, we provide insights on the IPCC as a network organisation.

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网络组织中的桥接。政府间气候变化专门委员会(IPCC)的案例
在本文中,我们调查了政府间气候变化专门委员会(IPCC)的关系架构,重点关注在其成立三十年中确保其不同组成部分之间联系的个人。为了研究IPCC内部的关系桥接,我们创建了一个独特的数据库,记录了自该组织成立以来为其做出贡献的所有个人,并记录了他们参与的工作流程(即职能+工作组+评估报告)。从这个数据库中,我们提取参与者工作流的附属网络,并使用它来计算桥接性的几个指标,我们对这些指标进行了讨论、验证和比较。我们使用这些指标来调查IPCC中桥接的总体分布和演变,同时也确定了更积极地在其作者和政府代表(功能性桥梁)、工作组(主题桥梁)及其评估周期(时间桥梁)之间提供联系的个人。重点关注关键桥梁个人的作用及其在组织中的轨迹,我们提供了关于IPCC作为一个网络组织的见解。
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来源期刊
Social Networks
Social Networks Multiple-
CiteScore
5.90
自引率
12.90%
发文量
118
期刊介绍: Social Networks is an interdisciplinary and international quarterly. It provides a common forum for representatives of anthropology, sociology, history, social psychology, political science, human geography, biology, economics, communications science and other disciplines who share an interest in the study of the empirical structure of social relations and associations that may be expressed in network form. It publishes both theoretical and substantive papers. Critical reviews of major theoretical or methodological approaches using the notion of networks in the analysis of social behaviour are also included, as are reviews of recent books dealing with social networks and social structure.
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