Report by Geoff Mulgan: “What can the academy actually tell us about building the institutions we need? Less than it should.
There is no shortage of brilliant work on how organisations behave. Economists trace how incentives shape institutional failure long before scandal does. Lawyers know that a vague mandate invites mission creep, while too narrow a one prevents adaptation. Anthropologists, following scholars like David Graeber, have shown that the official version of an institution and the version experienced by the person queuing inside it are often two different buildings entirely.
The trouble is that each discipline tends to describe the same animal without realising the others are touching it too. It is the old parable of the blind men and the elephant, retold across a dozen university departments: one insists it is a market, another a hierarchy, a third a culture, a fourth a constitutional order. Few step back to ask what the whole creature looks like, and fewer still ask how to build a better one…(More)”