Can a Darwinian nomenclature help reconcile alternative perspectives of the dynamic capabilities view?

Title
Can a Darwinian nomenclature help reconcile alternative perspectives of the dynamic capabilities view?
Publication Date
2015
Author(s)
Galvin, Peter
Rice, John
( author )
OrcID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3923-4424
Email: jrice6@une.edu.au
UNE Id une-id:jrice6
Liao, Tung-Shan
Type of document
Journal Article
Language
en
Entity Type
Publication
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Place of publication
United Kingdom
DOI
10.1017/jmo.2015.32
UNE publication id
une:20252
Abstract
The confusion concerning the theoretical roots of the dynamic capabilities view and the fact that it was often being positioned as an extension to the resource-based view in strategic management, prompted a paper by Galvin, Rice, and Liao (2014) that suggested that the dynamic capabilities view would benefit from adopting a more explicit Darwinian approach. In response to this paper, Arndt and Bach (2015) highlighted that the seminal papers in the field do indeed take an evolutionary perspective and that in operationalizing the variation-selection-retention cycle in an empirical setting it is necessary to move away from firm performance as a dependent variable and instead use survival, which more closely aligns with the concept of natural selection. In this paper, we respond to this recent critique to articulate the benefits of a Darwinian nomenclature and how this will assist in positioning the dynamic capabilities view as an independent, though complementary, theory to the resource-based view. However, we do clearly recognize that until the key terms of variation, selection and retention can be operationalized at the routine, firm and industry level, such an approach may not in itself bring the field towards a common understanding of how dynamic capabilities operate in different environments.
Link
Citation
Journal of Management & Organization, 21(5), p. 695-700
ISSN
1839-3527
1833-3672
Start page
695
End page
700

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