The Psychodynamics of Bureaucratic Work Experience
 
The
Psychodynamics of Bureaucratic Work Experience
There are two important aspects of this discussion. The
first are the psychodynamic origins of the bureaucratic hierarchy and the second
the circular reinforcing quality of the interaction of this organization design
with human nature.
The Psychodynamics of Bureaucratic
Hierarchy
Czander (1993) and Diamond (1993) point out a discomforting
but important perspective of organizational life. They and others describe an
organizational context where unconscious and most often undiscussible human
motivations exercise their influence in the adoption of an organization’s design
and subsequent operation. Bureaucratic hierarchies, they point out, contain many
elements that arise out of individual and socially defensive psychodynamics. In
particular, organizational membership raises control and dominance and
submission issues that first arise in infancy and continue throughout life. It
is, therefore, not much of a leap of faith to understand that how organizations
are conceived and operated is heavily influenced by the kinds of individual
propensities that we all share, thereby creating a shared but unconscious
socially defensive response. The form, substance and operation of our
organizations may then be seen to be in large part the long shadow cast by human
needs.
Reinforcing Circularity
The bureaucratic solution to workplace anxiety encourages
psychological defensiveness that may be observed to help maintain it. It is the
underlying defensive nature of bureaucracy that introduces the dysfunctions
associated with bureaucracy, such as organizational rigidity and compromised
adaptiveness, as well as heavy reliance upon policies and procedures to maintain
control that stifle work and creativity.
The bureaucratic solution to workplace anxiety that arises
out of threats to self serves to, in turn, create shared social defenses in
response to the demand for obedience and submission to impersonal authority, and
for the finely tuned structuring of work. Fear of interpersonal and group
aggression and personal annihilation are, in contrast to chaotic experience, not
coped with by withdrawal, unilateral interpersonal defenses and resignation.
Rather the response is more proactive where depersonalization and the creation
of a controlling social structure are relied upon to regulate self and other
experience to sustain personal identity (Diamond, 1993 and Kernberg, 1979).
Self-effacing personal submission becomes the norm (Horney, 1950). This reliance
on control is closely related to Freud’s anal stage of human development. Work
becomes ritualized and leadership institutionalized and routinized. Paranoia
arising from membership and accompanying persecutory anxiety is sufficiently
mediated so as to sustain individual, group and organizational functionality.
Interpersonal fears of aggression and being taken over or consumed by others or
the leader is sufficiently allayed. However, when stresses and strains arise in
the workplace, the pursuit of control of these fears and anxieties can lead to
obsessive focus on their socially defensive nature, stifling creativity and
adaptiveness that may paradoxically provide the way out of the stressful
situation. Shame, guilt and losses of personal responsibility may emerge as
features of organizational control as may splitting and projection that
frequently serves to locate an enemy without (Baum, 1987, 1990). In this regard
there develops a destructive feedback loop that introduces and perpetuates
distressing workplace experience, as was the case for chaotic work experience.
It is, therefore, not hard to see that the bureaucratic socially defensive
system carries within it the seeds of its own destruction. Undeniable problems
that threaten personal, group and organizational survival may exist. These
threats, when acknowledged, can lead to the development of a fight/flight
culture that energizes change to one of the other types of groups. Chapter 4 discusses
this potential for change.
In Sum
The bureaucratic hierarchy is so commonplace as to be taken
for granted as the only meaningful organization form. At the same time it
contains within it horizontal and vertical fragmentation and socially defensive
reliance upon control that introduces potentially serious losses of
organizational performance that may, like the chaotic group experience, be
perceived as threatening individual, group and organizational survival. The
group or organization may not fail, but it may fail to succeed, especially in
those cases where competing organizations do not present much of a threat, as is
the case for governmental entities and large public and private universities.
However, when the sense of collective threat is sufficient and enough group or
organization members feel that change is necessary, the door is opened to change
and the acquisition of another type of workplace experience such as one led by a
charismatic leader.
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