TY - JOUR
T1 - Administering New Anti-Bullying Law
T2 - The Organizational Field and School Variation During Initial Implementation
AU - Shepherd, Hana
AU - Fast, Idit
N1 - Funding Information:
We are grateful to Amy Kate Bailey, Debbie Becher, Daniel Hirschman, Catherine Lee, Emily Marshall, Eunmi Mun, Christine Percheski, Michelle Phelps, Ashley Rubin, and LaTonya Trotter for their helpful comments on this project and article. We also thank participants of sessions at Law and Society Association and American Sociological Association annual meeting for their feedback. The data for this project was collected by Shepherd in collaboration with Elizabeth Levy Paluck, and funded by grants from the W.T. Grant Foundation Scholars Program, Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, Princeton Educational Research Section, Russell Sage Foundation, Rutgers Research Council, National Science Foundation, and the Spencer Foundation. Allison Bland, Jennifer Dannals, Ariel Dombroski, and Laura Spence-Ash provided exceptional research assistance.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
PY - 2022/11/28
Y1 - 2022/11/28
N2 - A 2011 New Jersey anti-bullying law required school personnel to make nuanced determinations about student violations, take on multiple new roles, and assume a high administrative burden. We examine how the state's middle schools responded to the law during a period when standards for implementation among schools were unclear. We observe substantial variation between schools in their implementation approach and we identify two sources of this variation. First, parents, school district administrators and lawyers, state Department of Education staff, and private companies disseminated multiple, sometimes competing interpretations of the law and of bullying, to which school personnel were differentially exposed. Second, school personnel crafted their own implementation approach out of the varied interpretations from these organization field actors. In periods when legal standards are relatively settled, field actors often encourage conformity among organizations; in this case, by contrast, they contributed to variation in implementation. We argue that examining the on-the-ground interpretation of organization field meanings during unsettled periods may be particularly useful for understanding the trajectory of laws, as early variation provides the context in which organizational practices can become legal requirements.
AB - A 2011 New Jersey anti-bullying law required school personnel to make nuanced determinations about student violations, take on multiple new roles, and assume a high administrative burden. We examine how the state's middle schools responded to the law during a period when standards for implementation among schools were unclear. We observe substantial variation between schools in their implementation approach and we identify two sources of this variation. First, parents, school district administrators and lawyers, state Department of Education staff, and private companies disseminated multiple, sometimes competing interpretations of the law and of bullying, to which school personnel were differentially exposed. Second, school personnel crafted their own implementation approach out of the varied interpretations from these organization field actors. In periods when legal standards are relatively settled, field actors often encourage conformity among organizations; in this case, by contrast, they contributed to variation in implementation. We argue that examining the on-the-ground interpretation of organization field meanings during unsettled periods may be particularly useful for understanding the trajectory of laws, as early variation provides the context in which organizational practices can become legal requirements.
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U2 - 10.1017/lsi.2021.76
DO - 10.1017/lsi.2021.76
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85125806361
SN - 0897-6546
VL - 47
SP - 1264
EP - 1290
JO - Law and Social Inquiry
JF - Law and Social Inquiry
IS - 4
ER -