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Stepping in, aside or away? A micro-level study of commitment in cross sector partnerships

Cross sector partnerships (CSPs) are considered essential for addressing grand challenges, yet the actual partnering process often leads to friction, disappointing results, and dismay for those involved. Scholars have identified that individuals play a critical role in the success of cross sector co...

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Main Author: Sehgal, Sarita Danute
Other Authors: Hamann, Ralph
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Graduate School of Business (GSB) 2023
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access_status_str Open Access
author Sehgal, Sarita Danute
author2 Hamann, Ralph
author_browse Hamann, Ralph
Sehgal, Sarita Danute
author_facet Hamann, Ralph
Sehgal, Sarita Danute
author_sort Sehgal, Sarita Danute
collection Thesis
description Cross sector partnerships (CSPs) are considered essential for addressing grand challenges, yet the actual partnering process often leads to friction, disappointing results, and dismay for those involved. Scholars have identified that individuals play a critical role in the success of cross sector collaboration and that their commitment to the partnership facilitates CSP functioning. However, the micro-level aspects of commitment within CSPs have yet to be examined carefully. The partnership literature calls for more in-depth research on individuals and recommends drawing from the fields of organizational behaviour and organizational psychology. Meanwhile, the commitment literature calls for examination of workplace commitment within cross boundary settings and in relation to higher purpose causes. My interpretive, micro-level study responds to these parallel and synergistic needs for additional research by exploring what shapes individuals' commitment to cross sector partnerships. I use a constructivist grounded theory approach to conduct a longitudinal, comparative case study of 23 health partnership practitioners in South Africa. My findings are consolidated in an empirically developed model that describes how the nature of individuals' CSP commitment differs depending on which of three key commitment targets (employing organization, career, or social goal) they prioritize in the context of the partnership. In distinguishing between those who are instrumentally vs altruistically committed to the CSP, the model outlines two pathways through adversity which result in four different behavioural outcomes of exiting, stepping aside, stepping away or stepping in. Critically, the model illustrates what enables certain partnership practitioners to sustain CSP commitment despite adversity and how eudaimonic well-being is generated through this process. My examination of workplace commitment within CSPs contributes to the partnership literature by enhancing micro-level understanding of the human and emotional side of cross sector partnering. I provide insight on why individuals commit to CSPs and illustrate how this influences behavioural responses to adversity. I also contribute to the commitment literature by shedding light on the interplay of different commitment targets within a cross boundary, socially oriented workplace setting and providing empirical evidence for how altruism facilitates commitment. Finally, I reveal the benefit that sustained commitment generates for partnership practitioners and suggest how my findings may be leveraged for both partnering practice and future research.
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language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:34:36.552Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2023
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/37827 Stepping in, aside or away? A micro-level study of commitment in cross sector partnerships Sehgal, Sarita Danute Hamann, Ralph Business Cross sector partnerships (CSPs) are considered essential for addressing grand challenges, yet the actual partnering process often leads to friction, disappointing results, and dismay for those involved. Scholars have identified that individuals play a critical role in the success of cross sector collaboration and that their commitment to the partnership facilitates CSP functioning. However, the micro-level aspects of commitment within CSPs have yet to be examined carefully. The partnership literature calls for more in-depth research on individuals and recommends drawing from the fields of organizational behaviour and organizational psychology. Meanwhile, the commitment literature calls for examination of workplace commitment within cross boundary settings and in relation to higher purpose causes. My interpretive, micro-level study responds to these parallel and synergistic needs for additional research by exploring what shapes individuals' commitment to cross sector partnerships. I use a constructivist grounded theory approach to conduct a longitudinal, comparative case study of 23 health partnership practitioners in South Africa. My findings are consolidated in an empirically developed model that describes how the nature of individuals' CSP commitment differs depending on which of three key commitment targets (employing organization, career, or social goal) they prioritize in the context of the partnership. In distinguishing between those who are instrumentally vs altruistically committed to the CSP, the model outlines two pathways through adversity which result in four different behavioural outcomes of exiting, stepping aside, stepping away or stepping in. Critically, the model illustrates what enables certain partnership practitioners to sustain CSP commitment despite adversity and how eudaimonic well-being is generated through this process. My examination of workplace commitment within CSPs contributes to the partnership literature by enhancing micro-level understanding of the human and emotional side of cross sector partnering. I provide insight on why individuals commit to CSPs and illustrate how this influences behavioural responses to adversity. I also contribute to the commitment literature by shedding light on the interplay of different commitment targets within a cross boundary, socially oriented workplace setting and providing empirical evidence for how altruism facilitates commitment. Finally, I reveal the benefit that sustained commitment generates for partnership practitioners and suggest how my findings may be leveraged for both partnering practice and future research. 2023-04-26T10:43:04Z 2023-04-26T10:43:04Z 2022 2023-04-26T10:41:31Z Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/37827 eng application/pdf Graduate School of Business (GSB) Faculty of Commerce
spellingShingle Business
Sehgal, Sarita Danute
Stepping in, aside or away? A micro-level study of commitment in cross sector partnerships
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title Stepping in, aside or away? A micro-level study of commitment in cross sector partnerships
title_full Stepping in, aside or away? A micro-level study of commitment in cross sector partnerships
title_fullStr Stepping in, aside or away? A micro-level study of commitment in cross sector partnerships
title_full_unstemmed Stepping in, aside or away? A micro-level study of commitment in cross sector partnerships
title_short Stepping in, aside or away? A micro-level study of commitment in cross sector partnerships
title_sort stepping in aside or away a micro level study of commitment in cross sector partnerships
topic Business
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/37827
work_keys_str_mv AT sehgalsaritadanute steppinginasideorawayamicrolevelstudyofcommitmentincrosssectorpartnerships