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Subject: AEJ 05 DougallE PR AN EVOLUTIONARY MODEL OF ORGANIZATION-ACTIVIST RELATIONSHIPS
From: Elliott Parker <[log in to unmask]>
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Date:Mon, 6 Feb 2006 14:30:26 -0500
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This paper was presented at the Association for Education in Journalism and
Mass Communication in San Antonio, Texas August 2005.
         If you have questions about this paper, please contact the author
directly. If you have questions about the archives, email
rakyat [ at ] eparker.org. For an explanation of the subject line, 
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(Feb 2006)
Thank you.
Elliott Parker
====================================================================

AN EVOLUTIONARY MODEL OF ORGANIZATION-ACTIVIST RELATIONSHIPS



Elizabeth Dougall Ph.D.
Assistant Professor, School of Journalism & Mass Communication
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Campus Box 3365, Chapel Hill NC 27599-3365
Phone:  (919) 962-6396
Email: [log in to unmask]





Paper submitted April 1 to the AEJMC Public Relations Division (Open 
Division) for the
AEJMC Convention San Antonio, Texas
August 10-13, 2005.
Abstract

The public opinion environment is conceptualized as a set of issues 
that concern the focal population and their activist publics. An 
evolutionary model of organization-activist relationships (EOAR) is 
developed, and the propositions derived from this model are explored 
using a comparative case study approach.  These propositions 
anticipate and specify associations between variations in dimensions 
of the public opinion environment of an organizational population and 
the evolution of organization-activist relationships in the 
population.  Variations in this "issue set," are described using four 
dimensions: stability (turnover of issues), complexity (the number of 
issues in the issue set), intensity (volume of media coverage), and 
direction (favorability of media coverage for the focal 
population).  To capture the evolution of the focal relationships, 
their state is described on a conflict continuum using 
relationship-signaling statements made by organizations and activists 
and published by the media.  Three cases studies from the same 
organizational population, Australia's major banks, are compared over 
three different but consecutive seven-year periods from 1981 to 
2001.  The case studies included the extensive review of industry 
reports and several government inquiries, as well as the content 
analysis of more than 6, 500 newspaper articles published during each 
of the three case study periods.
AN EVOLUTIONARY MODEL OF ORGANIZATION-ACTIVIST RELATIONSHIPS

Arthur W. Page, was credited with arguing, more than half a century 
ago, that in a democracy all business begins with the public's 
permission and exists by public approval (Newsom, Van Slyke Turk, & 
Kruckeberg, 2000).  Organizations seek to be accepted by their 
publics, the general public, opinion leaders, and government 
officials.  In this way, they achieve legitimacy.  In her book, 
Researching the Public Opinion Environment, Devereaux Ferguson (2000) 
argued that corporations and governments alike must face the 
challenge of coping with "a volatile public opinion environment" (p. 
ix).  However, the nature of the organizational public opinion 
environment, its dimensions and characteristics, remains largely 
unspecified.  While the term "public opinion environment" appears 
intermittently in scholarly and trade publications, the dimensions 
and characteristics of this aspect of organizational environments 
remain largely unspecified.
The contention that the economic and social stability of an 
organization of any type depends on the attitudes and opinions of 
multiple publics; in other words, the public opinion environment is 
fundamental to public relations practice and scholarship (Newsom, et 
al., 2000).  On closer examination, this implicitly ecological 
concept appears opaque and invites a range of questions.  What are 
the properties of this public opinion environment, and how can its 
composition be captured?  In what ways does the public opinion 
environment change over time, and how can that change be 
characterized?  What are the impacts of this "volatile" public 
opinion environment for organization-public relationships?
This paper explores two challenges—the first is to conceptualize and 
measure variation in an important aspect of contemporary 
organizational environments, the public opinion environment, and the 
second is to investigate the influence of that environment on the 
critical and often highly exposed relationships between organizations 
and their activist publics.  Such publics include employee unions, 
consumer advocates, and shareholder associations.  In suggesting a 
relationship between variation in the environment and the 
evolutionary pathways of organizational relationships, the 
perspective underpinning this study is both ecological and evolutionary.
Emerging from the contention that the public opinion environment is 
an important environmental sector that similarly affects and 
constrains an organizational population, this study investigates the 
abiding research problem of whether variations in the dimensions of 
that environment are associated with the ways in which 
organization-activist relationships in that population 
evolve.  Classic hypotheses were inappropriate for this exploratory 
study.  Instead, the evolutionary model of organization-activist 
relationships (EOAR) is proposed and four propositions advanced.
The Literature

The evolutionary model of organization-activist relationships emerged 
primarily from the research and literature of organizational 
sociology, public opinion, social movements and public 
relations.  That literature is now briefly reviewed.  Contemporary 
perspectives of public opinion theory and research related to the 
organizational context of this study are briefly explored.  Two 
fundamental concepts—publics and the contested issues around which 
they organize—are of particular interest.  Next, the ecological 
perspective in which the concept of the organizational population is 
embedded is explicated and the evolutionary approach framing the 
discussion of organization-activist relationships explained.  The 
perspective of public relations as relationship management is 
relatively new but important for contemporary public relations theory 
and practice, so in the third section of this review the place of 
activist publics in the emerging organization-public relationships 
research agenda is argued.  Finally, the propositions of the 
evolutionary model of organization-activist relationships (EOAR) 
model are explored.
The Public Opinion Environment of Organizations - An Ecological Perspective
The public opinion environment is conceptualized as an aggregation or 
set of issues that concern organizations and their publics.  These 
issues are shared by organizations that occupy similar niches and are 
similarly constrained by a common environmental setting; that is, an 
organizational population.  In the same way that biologists study the 
relationships of populations of organisms to the carrying capacity of 
their environments—the capacity of environments to sustain and 
constrain the organisms of interest—population ecologists study 
populations of organizations and the carrying capacities of their 
environments.  The ecological approach to understanding organizations 
predicts that environmental factors "select" those organizational 
characteristics that best fit the environment and that when 
environments change, some types or "forms" of organizations become 
obsolete and die while others survive and even become more viable 
(Aldrich, 1979, 1999; Baum & Singh, 1994; Carroll, 1988; Hannan & 
Freeman, 1977, 1989).
The goal of the ecological perspective is to understand the forces 
that shape populations of organizations over long time spans (Hannan 
& Freeman, 1989).  The ecological perspective interprets 
organizational change, not as progress, but as simply achieving a 
better fit with the environment (Hall, 2002).  In response to 
criticisms of organizational ecology as deterministic, Hannan and 
Freeman (1989) describe their models as probabilistic, arguing that 
the individual actions deemed so critical by strategic management 
theorists may be important for individual organizations and their 
departments but are much less important for the population of 
organizations in which that organization is situated.
Ecological research emerges from longitudinal studies, and strongly 
comparable empirical findings across studies are delivered by 
organizational ecologists because they are "consistently using the 
same essential variable definitions and measurements" (Lewin & 
Volberda, 1999, p. 519).  Organizational ecologists characterize 
successful organizations as having structural inertia, meaning that 
the capacity of these organizations to adapt is limited, and they 
adapt slowly, if at all (Hannan & Freeman, 1989).  In contrast, 
strategic management theories focus on adaptation within individual 
organizations as a function of their internal strategy and design 
decisions (Lewin & Volberda, 1999).  The second perspective dominates 
contemporary public relations theory, much of which assumes that 
organizations are highly adaptive, that structural changes can and 
should occur in response to environmental variation, and that the 
role of public relations is to support and facilitate the 
organization as it adjusts and adapts to a changing environment 
(Everett, 2001).  A fundamental contention of organization ecology is 
that successful organizations are not flexible, adapt slowly or not 
at all, and are more likely to fail when undertaking fundamental 
change (Hannan & Freeman, 1977, 1989).  This contention contrasts 
starkly with the assumptions of continuous adaptation that prevail in 
the ecological models of public relations (Everett, 2001).  He argues 
that the continuous adaptation processes described in public 
relations theory may actually serve to increase the risk of failure 
for an organization that has successfully implemented a change 
program.  These models also fail to accommodate the role of selection 
in describing the relationship between organizational environments 
and the direction and implementation of the public relations 
activities and strategies of organizations (Everett, 2001).
By acknowledging the power of other organizations in the environment, 
the ecological perspective counters and offers correctives to public 
relations research that treats the individual organization as an 
actor without a setting and other actors (Cheney & Vibbert, 
1987).  In addition to providing the organizational population as a 
level of analysis, the ecological perspective challenges traditional 
approaches to public relations theory building.  This perspective 
provides a contrasting viewpoint from which to understand the 
interplay between environments, organizations, and publics by 
focusing on the specific associations between variations in one 
important sector, the public opinion environment, and the evidence of 
relationships that similarly constrained organizations have with 
their activist publics.
Publics and Issues
Publics and issues are "core concepts in public relations" (Botan & 
Taylor, 2004, p. 654) and both are central to this conceptualization 
of the public opinion environment.  An issue is created when one or 
more human agents attach significance to a situation or perceived 
problem (Crable & Vibbert, 1985).  Issues are contested because they 
concern the self-interests of key publics, leading them to support or 
to oppose the actions and policies of organizations (Heath & Douglas, 
1990, 1991).  Organizations and their publics share concerns for 
these issues, even though their positions are often very different 
(Heath & Douglas, 1990, 1991).  Although often conceptualized and 
described in quite singular terms, issues frequently demand the 
attention of many organizations and a multitude of publics (Heath, 
1997; Smith, 1996; Smith & Ferguson, 2001).  In ecological terms, 
issues are shared by organizations that occupy similar niches and are 
similarly constrained by a common environmental setting.  This idea 
is effectively captured by the organizational population concept.
Activists, together with other important but excluded publics, are 
not adequately accommodated within established public relations 
theory and research agendas, and organization-activist relationships 
are an important but neglected subset of organization-public 
relationships (Dozier & Lauzen, 2000; Holtzhausen, 2000; Karlberg, 
1996).  The "organization-centric" approach to understanding 
activists as organizational problems, has been extensively 
criticized.  Dozier and Lauzen (2000) and Karlberg (1996) asserted 
that the instrumental bias evident in public relations research into 
organization-activist public relationships has contributed to a 
predominantly partisan body of knowledge that seeks to prescribe 
organizational "solutions" to activist "problems."  Activism in 
organization-public relationships is most often treated in the public 
relations research literature as undesirable for the 
organization.  Models describing this phenomenon are useful only when 
they contribute to the organization's capacity to control and limit 
activism (Grunig, 1992; Grunig & Grunig, 1997; Heath, 1997).
Following Dewey's (1927) definition of publics as groups of people 
who see they have a common interest with respect to an organization 
and that endeavor "to act through suitable structures and thus to 
organize itself for oversight and regulation" (p. 29), the 
perspective of this research is that activist publics, like all other 
publics, are best understood as a process rather than a "thing" 
(Botan & Soto, 1988; Botan & Taylor, 2004).  Publics "share 
interpretations of events and actions in their environment.  When 
these interpretations lead to something the public wants addressed, 
then an issue exists" (Botan & Taylor, p. 655).  Activist publics 
organize around issues and issues are created when "one or more human 
agents attaches significance to a situation or perceived problem" 
(Crable & Vibbert, 1985, p. 5).  This perspective has more utility 
for public relations than the description of activist "groups" as a 
hostile part of the organizational environment.   Such a distinction 
is problematic and redundant in many important contexts.  For 
example, while an employee union is clearly a separate organization, 
the organizational employees they represent, including those who 
might be actively seeking some measure of organizational change are 
clearly "internal" publics. The problem of distinguishing between who 
or what belongs to the organization, and who or what is part of its 
environment, is resolved by conceptualizing activists first and 
foremost, as publics.  In other words, while the activist group is 
always an activist public, the activist public is not always an 
activist group or organization.
The Evolutionary Approach
The challenge of detecting associations between environmental 
variations and variations in the structural or behavioral attributes 
of organizations is an evolutionary one.  To adapt Hutchinson's 
metaphor (1965), the public opinion environment of the organizational 
population is the "ecological theatre" in which the particular 
"evolutionary play" of interest is the evolving organization-activist 
relationships in the population. The evolutionary approach is evident 
in this study at several levels.  First, it frames the primary 
research problem, which investigates the associations, if any, 
between external variation in the public opinion environment of an 
organizational population and the evolution of organization-activist 
relationships within that population.  Second, implicit in such a 
framework is the identification of organization-activist 
relationships in the population as units of selection, the 
observation of which helps us to explore their evolution.  Third, 
this study applies the evolutionary process of transformation to 
describe an observable change in the organization-activist 
relationships in the population.  It anticipates that, at the 
population level of analysis, variations in organization-activist 
relationships emerge over time in association with variations in the 
public opinion environment.
Evolutionary ecology describes the study of ecological processes in 
an evolutionary setting (Haila, 1990), and ecological and 
evolutionary arguments ask complementary questions about the same 
historical processes (Singh, 1990).  Aldrich (1999) contended that 
the evolutionary approach provided a generic framework for 
understanding social change and was an overarching framework for 
other approaches to organizational theory.  McKelvey (1994) argued 
that the theory of competition elaborated by evolutionary ecologists 
is much less ideological than that posed by economists because it 
does not rest on so many assumptions about human behavior and rationality.
For evolution to occur there must be variations, stable aspects of 
the environment differentially selecting from these variations, and 
retention processes that hold on to selected variations (Campbell, 
1969).  Because every new mutation represents the failure of 
previously selected forms to be reproduced, variation is inherently 
at odds with retention (Campbell, 1969).  Further, in arguing for the 
applicability of the evolutionary approach to organizational theory, 
Allard (1967), Campbell (1969), and later Aldrich (1999) described 
these mechanisms—variation, selection, and retention—as generic and 
not limited to biological systems. Aldrich, for instance, argued that 
these generic processes generate the "critical events occurring in 
the life histories of organizational entities" (p. 20) and subsuming 
other change processes.
An evolutionary perspective demands that what is being selected be 
carefully considered.  Selection occurs at two levels: bounded 
entities such as groups and organizations engaging in competition and 
cooperation, and the routines, operating procedures, and competencies 
undertaken by these bounded entities (Aldrich, 1999; Baum & Singh, 
1994).  Organizations can be viewed as "a mix of routines and 
competencies that can vary somewhat independently of one another and 
are thus available for selective retention" (Aldrich, p. 
36).  Organizations are therefore the temporary repositories of 
competencies and routines that are held by their members and embedded 
in their technologies, material artefacts, and other structures and 
processes.  Their relationships can be found within the structures 
and processes of organizations.
Just as organizations are embedded within populations of like 
organizations, so too are the relationships organizations have with 
activist publics and others.  Organizational relationships diffuse 
variations (Burns & Wholey, 1993; Leonard-Barton, 1995), and 
"within-population" relationships "can be a route through which 
successful routines are transferred" (Aldrich, 1999, p. 236).  The 
research problem addressed here investigates whether variations in 
organization-activist relationships within the focal organizational 
population emerge over time in response to variations in the public 
opinion environment.  Selection and retention of some variations 
occur, and organization-activist relationships undergo transformation 
if, and when, a major change in the relationship occurs.
The Place of Relationships in Public Relations
Most contemporary approaches to exploring organizational 
relationships are useful for capturing the state of a focal 
organizational relationship at a point in time or over a limited 
period (Ledingham & Bruning, 1998, 2000a; Huang, 1997, 
2001).  However, such approaches are not as useful for exploring the 
relationships at the organizational population level of analysis for 
a timeframe adequate to that demanded by ecological and evolutionary 
perspectives.  While organizational relationships are almost 
exclusively studied and understood using the perceptions of the 
parties in the relationships, Broom et al. (1997, 2000) provided a 
model for identifying relationship processes and structures at the 
organization-public level of analysis.  Drawing extensively from the 
interpersonal and interorganizational literature, they argued that 
organization-public relationships can be described and studied as 
objective phenomena that are not limited to the subjective 
experiences of individual participants, and have properties other 
than the perceptions of those involved (Broom et al., 1997, 
2000).  This perspective offers the most utility for describing the 
evolution of organization-activist relationships.
Emerging predominantly from interorganizational relationship theory 
(Aldrich, 1979; Galaskiewicz, 1985; Van de Ven, 1976), Broom et al. 
(1997) argued that organization-public relationships are the dynamic 
results of exchanges and reciprocity, and that they are able to be 
described at any given point in time.  They offered the following definition:
Organization-public relationships are represented by the patterns of 
interaction, transaction, exchange, and linkage between an 
organization and its publics.  These relationships have properties 
that are distinct from the identities, attributes, and perceptions of 
the individuals and social collectivities in the 
relationships.  Though dynamic in nature, organization-public 
relationships can be described at a single point in time and tracked 
over time (2000, p.18).
Others have taken a broader approach to defining organization-public 
relationships.  Ledingham and Bruning (1998), for instance, defined 
organization-public relationships as the state existing between an 
organization and its key publics "in which the actions of either 
entity impact the economic, social, political and/or cultural 
well-being of the other entity" (Ledingham & Bruning, 1998, p. 
62).  They also offer a definition of the  "ideal" 
organization-public relationship as "the state that exists between an 
organization and its key publics that provides economic, social, 
political and/or cultural benefits to all parties involved and is 
characterized by mutual positive regard" (p. 62).  Based on extensive 
conceptual development and empirical data, Huang (1998) defined 
organization-public relationships as "the degree that the 
organization and its publics trust one another, agree on one has 
rightful power to influence, experience satisfaction with each other, 
and commit oneself to one another" (p. 12).  Grunig and Huang (2000) 
specified the properties defining relationships, especially good 
relationships, and proposed that the most important dimensions of 
relationships are control, mutuality, trust, relational satisfaction, 
and relational commitment and goal attainment.
While the definitions and approaches offered by Ledingham & Bruning 
(1998, 2000a, 2000b), Huang (1997, 2001) and Grunig & Huang (2000) 
are useful for understanding organization-public relationships from 
the perspective of individuals involved in these relationships, they 
have limited utility for exploring the relationships within an 
organizational population over a period of time.  Such approaches 
have no utility for exploring relationships at the organizational 
population level of analysis and are also inadequate when the 
theoretical paradigm demands more than a snapshot in time.

The Evolutionary Model of Organization-Activist Relationships (EOAR)
The propositions of the EOAR model are detailed in Figure 1.  One of 
the challenges of this study was to locate a meaningful and 
practicable way of describing the evolving organization-activist 
relationships at the population level of analysis.  The nature of 
organization-activist relationships presupposes a degree of conflict 
as activists typically seek to precipitate or prevent organizational 
change and organizations resist activist pressures (Grunig, 1992; 
Smith & Ferguson, 2001).  Measures may be applied over time to 
describe the degree of conflict and cooperation in organizational 
relationships (Ehling, 1992).  The description of cooperation as the 
natural opposite of conflict (Ehling, 1992; Levinger & Rubin, 1994) 
provides a precedent for the conflict continuum described in Table 1 
and embedded in the EOAR model (see Figure 1).  These two ends of 
this continuum describe extreme and probably rare cases that provide 
useful theoretical boundaries but are not expected to represent the 
state of most organization-activist relationships; as Murphy (1991) 
explained, most situations "are located somewhere along the 
continuum" (p. 126).

-------------------------------------------------
Insert Table 1 about here
-------------------------------------------------

The concept of information flows is applied in this study to locate 
the state of these relationships on a conflict 
continuum.  Information flows are essential processes within all 
organizational relationships (Broom et al., 1997, 2000) and more 
specifically within the organization-activist relationships 
considered in this study.  Because of their role in covering the 
issues around which activists organize, the news media have an 
important role in organization-activist relationships, and evidence 
of these relationships is frequently visible in news media coverage 
(Grunig, 1992; Heath, 1997; Huang, 1997; Olien, Tichenor, & Donahue, 
1989, 1995; Smith & Ferguson, 2001).  These information flows provide 
cues about the state of relationships to the organizations and 
activists and to interested observers.  The assumptions made to 
operationalize the conflict continuum are that organizations and 
activists signal the state of their relationships in public 
statements about their shared issues of concern and that some of 
these statements are reported by the news media.  It is from this 
evidence that conclusions about the degree of conflict or cooperation 
are drawn.
The dimensions of the public opinion environment organizing the EOAR 
model are now advanced.  These dimensions—stability, complexity, 
intensity, and direction—provide the apparatus with which variations 
in the public opinion environment of the focal organizational 
population are identified and measured.   The foundations for the 
propositions of this model are now discussed (see Figure 1).

-------------------------------------------------
Insert Figure 1 about here
-------------------------------------------------

Stability of organizational environments and evolving 
organization-activist relationships. One of the primary dimensions of 
environments is the extent to which they are static or dynamic 
(Duncan, 1972).  Stability or instability typically "refers to the 
extent of turnover of elements or parts of the environment" (Hall, 
2002, p. 212).  Much of the literature in organization theory 
suggests that turnover, absence of pattern, and unpredictability are 
the best measures of environmental stability-instability (Dess & 
Beard, 1984).  Stable and certain environments generate low levels of 
diversity (Hannan & Freeman, 1989), and a less diverse environment is 
simpler for organizations to operate within since they can develop 
standardized ways of responding (Hall, 2002).
The concept of stability is applied here to describe the turnover of 
issues in the issue set comprising the public opinion environment of 
the focal organizational population.  A stable public opinion 
environment is evident when the turnover of issues in the issue set 
is very low.  Conversely, an unstable public opinion environment is 
characterized by high issue turnover.  The turnover of issues has two 
critical implications for organization-activist 
relationships.  First, the extent and standardization of relationship 
routines and interactions are linked to environmental 
certainty.  Second, issue longevity affects the duration of the 
relationships around which they are organized, creating opportunities 
for issue resolution.
When the issue set in the public opinion environment is stable, 
allowing organizations and activist publics to organize their 
interactions and establish routines that require some degree of 
cooperation in relation to issues of concern, these relationships are 
more likely to move toward a cooperative state.  In an unstable 
public opinion environment in which issue turnover is high, 
uncertainty is high, and routines and standards in relationships are 
not evident, the opportunity and motive to advance the resolution of 
issues cooperatively are more limited.  Organization-activist 
relationships within the focal population are therefore expected to 
move toward a conflict state in an unstable public opinion environment.
The stability proposition. The first proposition of the EOAR model 
is, therefore, that as the stability of the issue set in the public 
opinion environment increases, organization-activist relationships in 
the population move toward a cooperative state.
Complexity of organizational environments and evolving 
organization-activist relationships. Environmental complexity 
describes the number and variety of activities and situations with 
which organizations must interconnect over time (Hall, 2002).  Dess 
and Beard (1984) applied the term complexity to capture the degree to 
which organizational environments are heterogeneous or homogeneous 
and the extent to which they are concentrated or dispersed.  In the 
public opinion environment of an organizational population, as the 
number and diversity of issues to be negotiated increases, so too 
does the complexity of interactions demanded.  In this study, 
complexity is described by the number of issues in the issue set with 
which the organizational population must contend.    Complexity is 
described by the number of issues of concern to the organizational 
population and is measured by the number of issues in the issue set 
at intervals over time.  The number of issues in the issue set 
impacts the organizational population and its activist relationships 
in two ways.  First, attempts to negotiate, resolve, or deal in other 
ways with issues demand the dedication of people, time, and other 
organizational resources.  More issues means higher demands on 
organizational resources, and as these resources are spread more 
thinly, the resolution of some issues are given lower priority 
(Heath, 1997).  Second, activist publics organize around 
issues.  More issues means more activist publics vying to advance 
their interests and more relationships for the organizational 
population to sustain.  Again, the increasing complexity of issues 
adds pressure to the finite human and other resources of the 
organizational population.
An increasingly complex public opinion environment is evident when 
the number of issues multiplies, competition for the organizational 
and other resources rises, and the number of relationships to 
negotiate increases.  Under such conditions of increasing issue-set 
complexity, the opportunity to deal with issues of mutual concern 
cooperatively is constrained, and organization-activist relationships 
in the focal population are more likely to move toward a conflict 
state.  When issue-set complexity decreases and fewer issues comprise 
the issue set, organization-activist relationships are more likely to 
move toward a cooperative state.
The complexity proposition.  Emerging from this discussion is the 
second proposition of the EAOR model: as the complexity of the issue 
set in the public opinion environment increases, 
organization-activist relationships in the population move toward a 
conflict state.
Intensity of organizational environments and evolving 
organization-activist relationships. The third dimension of the 
public opinion environment, intensity, is derived from the public 
opinion literature and describes how strongly opinions are held by 
publics (Glynn, Herbst, O'Keefe & Shapiro, 1999).  From an ecological 
perspective, the intensity of the public opinion environment of an 
organizational population is embedded in the concept of legitimacy, 
which is "a generalized perception or assumption that the actions of 
an entity are desirable, proper, or appropriate within some socially 
constructed system of norms, values, beliefs and definitions" 
(Suchman, 1995, p. 574).
Intensity is applied here as an indicator of the extent of the public 
opinion environment confronting the organizational population and is 
described by the volume of media coverage of issues in the issue set. 
Discussions of intensity and the evolving organization-relationship 
revolve around two related points.  First, there is consistent 
evidence of a relationship between the volume of media coverage and 
the level of public concern for an issue (McCombs & Shaw, 1972; 
Neuman, 1990). Second, increased media coverage is an important 
indicator of an expanding audience for issues, and conflicting 
parties are likely to take tougher and more extreme positions as the 
size of the audience grows (Levinger & Rubin, 1994).  Under 
conditions of sustained intensity, the audience expands, and 
opportunities for organizations and their activist publics to deal 
cooperatively with their issues of mutual concern decline.
The intensity proposition. Therefore, the third proposition of the 
EOAR model is that as the intensity of the issue set in the public 
opinion environment increases, organization-activist relationships in 
the population move toward a conflict state.
Direction of organizational environments and evolving 
organization-activist relationships. The direction dimension is 
derived from the public opinion literature and describes where people 
position themselves in relation to issues (Glynn et al., 1999). Using 
the favorability of media coverage as an indicator of public opinion, 
direction is applied to describe the degree to which the activities 
of organizations attract public support or favor (Deegan, Rankin & 
Voght, 2000; Deegan, Rankin & Tobin, 2002; Deephouse, 
2000).  Strongly positive public opinion about organizational 
activities and interests contributes to increased credibility and 
acceptance, and these are important indicators of organizational 
legitimacy (Deegan et al., 2002).
Direction is applied here to capture the favorability of the focal 
organizational population's public opinion environment as described 
by the extent to which the media coverage of the organizational 
population is favorable.  A favorable public opinion environment is 
one in which media coverage of issues in the issue set is 
predominantly positive for the organizational population, and an 
unfavorable public opinion environment is evident when media coverage 
of issues is primarily negative.
In the context of organization-activist relationships, it is 
anticipated that when organizational populations experience 
predominantly negative media coverage, that is, an unfavorable public 
opinion environment, they address this situation by attempting to 
increase their degree of cooperation with their activist publics.  As 
the public opinion environment becomes more favorable, the degree of 
cooperation in organization-activist relationships decreases as the 
pressure for the organizational population to resolve issues reduces.
The direction proposition.  The fourth and final proposition of the 
EOAR model is that as the direction of the issue set in the public 
opinion environment becomes less favorable, organization-activist 
relationships in the population move toward a cooperative state.
Method
The theoretical orientation of this study excludes static or 
cross-sectional research approaches and sets the imperative for a 
methodology that is simultaneously exploratory and longitudinal.  The 
comparative case study method was selected as an appropriate 
framework with which to describe and explore the public opinion 
environment of the focal population and the organization-activist 
relationships embedded in that setting.  To be effective, comparative 
case studies must permit structured and focused comparisons, and this 
demands the disciplined and systematic collection of data (George & 
McKeown, 1985; King, Keohane & Verba, 1994; Verba, 1967).
The timeframe.  The timeframe imperative is located in the ecological 
and evolutionary perspectives of the EOAR model. This study examines 
the 21 years following deregulation in 1981, which encompassed 
episodes of upheaval and relative stability.  Prior to 1981, 
significant events in the banking and finance sector included the 
passing of the Banking Act 1945, the separation of the Commonwealth 
and Reserve Banks in 1959, and the 1974 passage of legislation that 
aimed to regulate the activities of non-bank financial institutions 
(Thomson & Abbott, 2000).  While these events may have provided 
useful starting points for a different kind of study, the imperative 
of this research is to capture changes in this environment that help 
to elaborate the propositions of the EOAR model.  The year 1981 is a 
logical and pragmatic starting point because of the shift in the 
regulatory climate that occurred around that time in response to the 
wider social and political changes.  Those 21 years are divided into 
logically derived and purposively selected case studies representing 
three seven-year periods.  These three periods constitute loosely 
significant and natural boundaries in the life of the organizational 
population.
	The focal population.  Political, economic, cultural, technological, 
and other environmental dimensions similarly constrain Australia's 
major banks, and while these may be differentiated by their marketing 
and operational policies, there are uniform national laws and 
regulations to which all must adhere.  For the 21 years of interest 
to this study and for many preceding years, the major banks operated 
within a relatively consistent regulatory environment in which they 
were required to abide by federal regulations and report to federally 
appointed agencies with responsibilities and powers in place 
nationally.  Banks are intermittently subject to the attentions of 
activist publics, including trade unions, farmer advocacy groups, and 
retail consumer associations.  Because of the scrutiny historically 
paid to the major banks by governments, activists, the media, and 
various other interest groups and influencers, rich sources of 
accessible data are therefore available to build these case studies.
Units of analysis.  The two units of analysis important to this study 
are the public opinion environment of the organizational population 
and the organization-activist relationships within that 
population.  To explore the propositions of the EOAR model, I have 
operationalised these units of analysis as the issue set for the 
major banks and the aggregation of public statements from which the 
state of the organization-activist relationships can be interpreted.
Collection procedures.  Data were systematically sampled from a 
selection of the largest circulating national and state newspapers in 
Australia from April, 1981 to October, 2001.  The newspapers selected 
were The Australian, Australian Financial Review, The Age, Sydney 
Morning Herald, and Courier Mail.  Data from the nominated print 
media sources were extracted systematically from the same two months 
every year in each seven-year case study.  Every sixth month, 
specifically April and October, was selected because of the critical 
position of these months for the population before and after the 
financial year-end of June 30.  These are important months in bank 
reporting cycles during which annual results and shareholder meetings 
are often conducted or forecast (October) and quarterly results are 
posted or projected (April).  The data were managed using SPSS for 
Windows, version 11.5.
Government and other reports as sources of evidence.  To provide a 
framework for the interpretation and analysis of the newspaper 
coverage, the reports from several major government inquiries, 
industry reports, and scholarly articles were reviewed.  The primary 
source documents were the reports from major Commonwealth government 
inquiries, beginning with the Campbell Report in 1981, the Martin 
Committee of Review in 1983, the 1991 House of Representatives 
Standing committee on Finance and Public Administration (Martin 
Parliamentary committee), the Financial System Inquiry of 1996, known 
as the Wallis Inquiry, and the Report of the Royal Commission into 
HIH Insurance (2003).  Submissions made to those inquiries by 
industry groups, community and church organizations, and various 
activist publics appearing as supplements to these reports were 
integral to this phase of evidence gathering.  Also important were 
news media reports concerning the findings of these committees of 
inquiry.  From this framework a detailed schedule with which to code 
the issue set and to map the nature of bank-activist relationships 
was derived and applied to the extraction and analysis of newspaper coverage.
	 Describing the issue sets.  The coding schedule consisted of 24 
issue classifications and included three options for the 
classification of issues. While many articles described more than one 
issue, relatively few articles primarily covered more than three 
issues with any degree of depth.  The additional resource demands at 
both the coding and the analysis phases outweighed the diminishing 
benefits of recording more than three issues for each article.  This 
schedule specified standard publication details for each article, 
including source, date, and page number.  The articles were coded for 
issues evident, the banks named, and the activist publics named.  The 
content of the article in relation to its direction, favorable or 
otherwise, to the major banks was then coded for an overall impression.
Articles were rated as favorable when the major banks were praised 
for their actions or associated with positively constructed actions 
(Deephouse, 2000) or where the content indicated that the operations, 
strategies, or performance of the banks was beneficial to, or in 
harmony with, the social environment (Deegan et al., 2002).  Articles 
were rated as unfavorable when the focal banks were criticized for 
their actions or associated with negatively constructed actions that 
past research indicated have been found to negatively impact public 
opinion (Deegan et al., 2002; Deephouse, 2000).  A neutral rating was 
given when the article reported performance without any evaluative 
modifiers or when there was a balance of favorable and unfavorable 
reporting.  These articles typically provided straightforward reports 
of bank operations, strategies, or performance and were neither 
positively nor negatively constructed.
Appropriate reliability checks were undertaken.  Holsti's (1969) 
coefficient of reliability was applied.  The results of those 
interrater agreement tests are split into three outcomes for each 
case study: publication details and actors (banks and activist 
publics), the issue set, and the direction of favorability.  For 
publication details and actors specified in the article, interrater 
reliability was 0.99, 0.99, and 0.98 for case one, two, and three 
respectively.  The second outcome related to the issues evident in 
these articles.  For this category, interrater reliability was 0.96 
for case one and 0.95 for cases two and three.  The interrater 
reliability for issue-set direction of favorability was 0.85 for case 
one, 0.87 for case two, and 0.78 for case three.  While the 
interrater reliability was lower for this category, it was considered 
acceptable given the exploratory nature of this research (Riffe et 
al., 1998; Weber, 1990).  Also, when coding for something other than 
manifest content, interrater reliability is usually lower (Holsti, 1969).
Describing organization-activist relationships.  Concurrent with the 
issue-set coding, each recording unit was coded for the state of 
organization-activist public relationships in the population.  The 
recording unit for the organization-activist relationship was defined 
as the comments contained within a single sentence that referred to 
issues in the issue set and were directly or indirectly attributed to 
the major banks or their activist publics; in other words, the 
recording units were the direct or indirect quotes reported in 
newspaper articles attributed to either banks or activists. The 
coding scheme required the coder to specify the standard publication 
details as derived from the public opinion environment analysis, to 
specify the bank or activist source of the statement, and finally to 
specify the relationship as reflecting either a cooperative, a 
conflict, or a neutral state.  The full text of each public statement 
from the sampled articles amounted to 2,175; 5,103; and 4, 646 
recording units for analysis for case studies one, two, and three 
respectively.  The interrater outcomes were 0.87, 0.84, and 0.81 for 
cases one, two, and three respectively.  Before the data were 
entered, the coders reconciled disagreements in one of two ways.  If 
two of the three coders agreed, the coding decision favored the 
majority view.  If the coders failed to agree, I reviewed the 
statement and made a final decision.
Measurement and Analysis
While the case studies emerged from an extensive data set, each case 
is built around 14 data points, specifically 14 months sampled over 
seven years.  It is only when the three cases were compared across 
all 42 months that sufficient data points were available to observe 
the presence or absence of significant relationships using 
appropriate statistical methods.  The stability, intensity, 
complexity and direction of the issue sets and the state of the 
bank-activist relationships were reported for each case.  Variations 
in the dimensions of the issue sets between the months sampled and 
described the evolving bank-activist relationships were determined.
To assess the issue-set stability, I compared the data for two 
months, for example April, 1998 and October, 1998, or October, 1987 
and April, 1988, and observed the turnover of issues.  For example, 
if exactly the same 20 issues appeared in two consecutive months, 
stability was recorded as 0.0, that is zero turnover of issues.  To 
assess issue-set complexity, I extracted the issue sets for each 
month specified in each case study, as described by frequency reports 
on the issues evident.  I then made a simple calculation of the 
number of different issues appearing in each of the selected 
months.  Complexity was therefore a calculation of the number of 
different issues evident during each month selected.  Issue-set 
intensity was assessed by making a simple calculation of the number 
of articles appearing in each of the selected months. To assess 
issue-set direction, articles were coded as favorable (1), 
unfavorable (-1), or neutral (0) to the organizational 
population.  Each article was given equal weight in the measure.  For 
each period, I aggregated the recording units for analysis using the 
coefficient of imbalance originally developed by Janis and Fadner 
(1965) to analyze wartime propaganda.  I applied this coefficient for 
this study to measure the relative proportion of favorable to 
unfavorable articles while controlling for the overall volume of 
articles.  Its formula is:
(f2 – fu)/(total) 2  if f > u; OR 0 if f = u; OR (fu-u2) / (total)2 if u> f
In a given period, "f" equals the number of favorable recording 
units, "u" equals the number of unfavorable recording units, and 
total equals the sum of the number of favorable, unfavorable and 
neutral recording units (Deephouse, 2000; Janis & Fadner, 1965). This 
calculation was made for each of the selected months in each case study.
	To measure the organization-activist relationship state, 
relationship-signaling statements were coded as indicating 
cooperation (1), conflict (-1) or neutral (0).  I then aggregated the 
scores for the months selected.  Interpretations as to the state of 
these relationships emerged from descriptive and enumerative 
approaches to measurement.  First, for each month, I aggregated the 
total frequencies of conflict, cooperative, and neutral statements 
and made notes describing the relationship state using a standardized 
set of phrases, such as "very low conflict, some cooperation 
evident—moving toward a co-operative state from low to very low.  On 
the basis of this detailed description, I interpreted whether the 
relationship state was moving toward a conflict or a cooperative 
state or remaining static.  Second, to effectively measure the 
relative proportion of statements reflecting a conflict state in 
comparison to those reflecting a cooperative state and controlling 
for the overall volume of statements, I applied Janis and Fadner's 
(1965) coefficient of imbalance.  The outcomes for each month were 
used to place the relationship on the continuum between -1 (total 
conflict) and 1 (total cooperation).
The outcomes of both descriptive and enumerate approaches in order to 
better understand the data set.  While the coefficient of imbalance 
provides a useful measure of the relationship state, the descriptive 
approach provides a more detailed understanding of this data in 
relation to the interplay between the two groups, banks and 
activists, and variations in manifest conflict, cooperation, and 
neutrality.  These insights are invaluable for interpreting the 
results of the analysis in relation to the propositions of the EOAR model.
  To analyze these separate and distinct sets of data—the issue set 
and bank-activist relationships—I organized the outcomes for each 
issue-set dimension and for the bank-activist relationships for each 
case using tables and graphs (Miles & Huberman, 1994).  I then made 
interpretations about the extent to which the outcomes support, 
oppose, or are neutral in relation to the propositions of the EOAR 
model.  For example, if the intensity proposition of the EOAR model 
was supported in 7 of the 14 months sampled, that is, if intensity 
increased and bank-activist relationships moved toward conflict, or 
intensity decreased and the relationships moved toward cooperation, 
the result was reported as follows: "Support for the intensity 
proposition is evident in 50% of the months sampled (n = 7)."
In the second, comparative phase of this analysis, I explored the 
data for evidence of any statistically significant associations 
between variations in issue-set stability, complexity, intensity and 
direction, and the bank-activist relationships.  Using the Pearson 
product-moment correlation, I analyzed the data for all 42 months 
sampled across the three case studies for significant 
relationships.  These outcomes were intended only to supplement this 
exploration given the small sample size and were thus treated 
conservatively.  The results of the data analysis for each case study 
and the comparison of all three case studies are now reported.

Results

Stability and Evolving Bank-Activist Relationships
The first proposition of the EOAR model contends that, as the 
stability of the issue set in the public opinion environment 
increased, organization-activist relationships in the population 
moved toward a cooperative state. Using the Pearson product-moment 
correlation, no significant relationship emerged between variations 
in issue-set stability and the location of bank-activist 
relationships on the conflict continuum.  To further explore the 
stability proposition, the bank-activist relationship data was 
analyzed using the raw frequencies of conflict, cooperative, and 
neutral statements. Some significant relationships emerged between 
variations in issue-set stability and the frequencies of these 
statements.  As issue-set stability decreased and issue turnover 
increased, the number of cooperative statements made by the banks 
increased, r = -0.327, p < 0.05 (one-tailed), as did the frequency of 
conflict statements made by the activists, r = -0.258, p < 0.05 
(one-tailed).  When the frequencies for conflict, cooperative, and 
neutral statements from both banks and activists were aggregated, 
significant relationships between issue-set stability and the 
frequencies of neutral and cooperative statements emerged.  When 
issue stability decreased, the frequency of neutral statements 
increased, r = -0.261, p < 0.05 (one-tailed), as did the frequency of 
cooperative statements r = -0.287, p < 0.05 (one-tailed).
When the stability of the issue set decreased and there was an 
increase in the turnover of issues in the issue set, the banks were 
more likely to make cooperative and neutral statements, while the 
activists were more likely to make statements indicating a conflict state.
Complexity and Evolving Bank-Activist Relationships
The complexity proposition of the EAOR model contends that, as the 
number of issues in the public opinion environment increased, as 
described by the issue set, organization-activist relationships in 
the population moved toward a conflict state. The complexity 
proposition was not supported.  To further explore the complexity 
proposition, raw frequencies of conflict, cooperative, and neutral 
statements were analyzed using the Pearson product-moment 
correlation.  Significant relationships emerged between variations in 
issue-set complexity and the frequencies of conflict, cooperative, 
and neutral statements from which conclusions about the state of 
bank-activist relationships were derived.  As issue-set complexity 
increased, so, too, did the total number of conflict, cooperative, 
and neutral statements, r = 0.567, p < 0.01 (one-tailed).  As 
complexity increased, both banks and activists tended to generate 
more relationship-signaling statements.
Other ways to effectively describe the complexity of the issue set 
were considered.  The concept of complexity as the number of 
activists that the banks must engage with, or respond to, over issues 
of concern was explored.  The foundations of this conceptualization 
of complexity emerged from the interorganizational relationship 
literature, in which the number of relationships an organization must 
sustain is considered to be an important aspect of organizational 
environments (Aldrich, 1979; Broom et al., 1997, 2000; Hall, 2002; 
Van de Ven, 1976).  The complexity of activist publics was therefore 
operationalized as the number of bank-activist relationships in the 
issue set, as described by the number of activist publics mentioned 
in the print media coverage.  The "complexity of activist 
relationships" proposition anticipated that any increase in the 
frequencies with which activist publics were mentioned would be 
associated with bank-activist relationships moving toward a conflict 
state, and any decrease would be associated with moves toward a 
cooperative state.  The frequencies with which activist publics were 
mentioned were extracted and aggregated for each month, and the 
outcomes explored in relation to this "complexity of activist 
relationships" proposition.   A significant, but not strong 
relationship was detected between the complexity of activist 
relationships and the total bank-activist relationship outcome, r = 
-0.280, p < 0.05 (one-tailed).
Intensity and Evolving Bank-Activist Relationships
The intensity proposition of the EOAR model contended that, as the 
intensity of the public opinion environment increased, 
organization-activist relationships in the population moved toward a 
conflict state, and as issue-set intensity decreased, these 
relationships moved toward a cooperative state.
Issue-set intensity varied from a low of 18 articles in April of 1981 
to a high of 356 articles in April of 1992.  Using the Pearson 
product-moment correlation, I could not detect significant 
relationships between the intensity of the issue set and the location 
of bank-activist relationships on the conflict continuum.  Again, 
this outcome must be treated with caution and is intended only to 
supplement this exploration given the small sample size.
As with the stability and complexity dimensions, significant 
relationships emerged between intensity and the frequency of conflict 
statements r = 0.554, p < 0.01 (one-tailed), the frequency of 
cooperative statements r = 0.444, p < 0.01 (one-tailed), and the 
frequency of neutral statements r = 0.630, p < 0.01 (one-tailed).  It 
is important not to overstate the significance of this 
outcome.  Intensity described the volume of media coverage, 
operationalised in this study by the frequency of newspaper 
articles.  Frequencies of bank and activist relationship-signaling 
statements were extracted from those articles.  The fact that the 
volume of articles and the frequencies of statements increased and 
decreased in tandem adds little value to this analysis.  However, it 
is important to note that when the increase or decrease in intensity 
was more extreme, that is more substantial in range, bank-activist 
relationships were more likely to move along the conflict continuum 
toward conflict or toward cooperation in the ways anticipated by the 
propositions of the EOAR model.
Direction and Evolving Bank-Activist Relationships
The direction proposition anticipates that as the public opinion 
environment becomes less favorable, organization-activist 
relationships in the population move toward a cooperative state.  The 
direction proposition was supported in just 14.6% of the months 
analyzed (n = 6) for all three case studies.  In each case, the 
evidence supported the opposite contention; in other words, as 
issue-set direction varied from favorable to unfavorable, 
bank-activist relationships were more likely to show evidence of 
movement toward a conflict state. When I explored the 1981-2001 data 
using the Pearson product-moment correlation, significant 
relationships between the direction of the issue set and the 
frequencies of relationship-signaling statements were 
evident.  Significant relationships emerged between direction and the 
frequency of conflict statements r = -0.613, p < 0.01 (one-tailed), 
the frequency of cooperative statements r = -0.395, p < 0.01 
(one-tailed), and the frequency of neutral statements r = -0.358, p < 
0.01 (one-tailed).  As the direction of the issue set became less 
favorable, the banks generated more cooperative, conflict, and 
neutral statements, and the banks made fewer relationship-signaling 
statements when the direction was more favorable, r = -0.445, p < 
0.01 (one-tailed).  The activists responded similarly with more or 
less relationship-signaling statements associated with issue-set 
direction, r = -0.507, p < 0.01 (one-tailed).
Evidence therefore emerged to support the contention that, as the 
issue set grew more unfavorable, the frequency of 
relationship-signaling statements increased.  In other words, when 
the anticipated associations between issue-set favorability and 
bank-activist relationships were reversed, the revised proposition 
was well supported.

Discussion

   When organization-activist relationships are described at the 
population level of analysis, the required lens is necessarily long, 
and the resulting description is a landscape of change rather than 
the close-up portrait more familiar to public relations 
research.  Some important aspects of the variation, selection, 
retention, and transformation of organization-activist relationships 
were evident using the lens provided by the conflict continuum and 
the relationship-signaling statements comprising that continuum.  The 
findings are summarized in Figure 2 and suggest that the evolving 
bank-activist relationships are more tightly coupled to the 
complexity of activist relationships (number of activist publics), 
direction (favorability), and intensity (volume of media coverage), 
than to the stability (issue turnover) and complexity (number of 
issues) dimensions.  The revised EOAR model is described in Figure 3.

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Insert Figure 2 about here
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Insert Figure 3 about here
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The Stability Proposition
The stability propositions of the EOAR model anticipated that, as the 
issue set stabilized and the turnover of issues decreased, 
organization-activist relationships in the population moved toward a 
cooperative state.  Although variations in issue-set turnover were 
not consistently associated with moves toward or away from a conflict 
state, as anticipated by the EOAR model, some evidence of significant 
relationships emerged.  As the issue set became more unstable and the 
turnover of issues in the issue set increased, relationship-signaling 
statements from both banks and activists increased in 
frequency.  More specifically, as the stability of the issue set 
decreased, the major banks were more likely to generate statements 
signaling a cooperative relationship state, while their activist 
publics were more likely to generate statements signaling conflict.
Two explanations are offered for the lack of support for the 
stability proposition.  First, in contrast to an issue set that 
varies frequently, a stable issue set can provide more opportunities 
for organizations and activists to gather resources and to advance 
their positions on issues of mutual concern.  Second, when issue 
turnover is higher, the more intermittent media coverage given to 
issues heightens the challenge for organizations and activists to 
attract interest to their issues of concern, and this limits the 
evidence available to track the evolving relationships.
One further explanation for the lack of consistent support for the 
association between a stable public opinion environment and 
heightened relationship conflict is that, as the issues in the issue 
set stabilized, organizations and activists had more opportunity to 
pursue issues of mutual concern, to marshal resources, and to advance 
and substantiate more sophisticated arguments.  In other words, a 
stable issue set can provide a more conducive environment for a 
heightened conflict state as activists and organizations have further 
opportunities to advance their positions on issues of mutual 
concern—positions that are frequently in opposition and therefore 
predisposed to conflict.  With the time and opportunity provided by 
issue-set stability, the relationships between the banks and 
activists become more visible in media coverage.
Furthermore, in an unstable public opinion environment characterized 
by higher issue turnover, it is also potentially difficult for 
activist publics to build and sustain public interest using the more 
intermittent media coverage available as attention shifts from one 
issue to the next.  Even if the relationships are in a heightened 
state of conflict during times of higher issue turnover, less 
consistent media coverage of the issues of concern means fewer 
relationship-signaling statements and therefore more limited evidence 
from which to track the relationships.
The Complexity Proposition
The complexity proposition of the EOAR model contends that, as 
issue-set complexity increased, organization-activist relationships 
moved toward a conflict state, and as complexity decreased, these 
relationships moved toward a cooperative state on the conflict 
continuum.  The findings of this study do not support these 
associations. Variations in other dimensions of the public opinion 
environment were more closely associated with the evolving 
organization-activist relationships.  However, variations in the 
number of issues were associated with the volume of 
relationship-signaling statements these organizations and activists 
generated.
Several important points emerge from the consideration of the 
findings in relation to this proposition.  First, the inertia of the 
issue set—that is, the consistency of the issue set of the focal 
population—was not anticipated.  Because of this inertia, the range 
of variation evident in the issue set was limited, particularly 
between the first and third case studies when the number of issues 
varied only slightly between the months sampled.  Second, variations 
in the number of issues are already accounted for in the stability 
dimension, and as a single dimension, complexity becomes less useful 
when variations in complexity are more limited.  Third, complexity 
can be conceptualized in other ways.  Two important ways to describe 
complexity are the number of relationships with which organizations 
must contend (Hall, 2002; C. Oliver, 1990) and the concentration or 
dispersion of an environmental sector (Aldrich, 1979; Dess & Beard, 
1984).  The number of activist publics responding to, or engaging 
with, issues of concern was operationalized by assessing the 
frequency with which activist publics are mentioned.  In a public 
opinion environment where complexity increases, as described by the 
number of activist relationships within the organizational 
population, the strain on organizational resources also 
increases.  Organizations must then negotiate with multiple publics, 
either by spreading resources or by prioritizing their publics (Heath, 1997).
Specified as one of the important properties of environmental 
variation, concentration-dispersion is defined from an ecological 
perspective as the degree to which resources are evenly distributed 
or concentrated in particular locations (Aldrich, 1979; Dess & Beard, 
1984).  In the context of the public opinion environment, 
concentration can be conceptualized on a continuum from highly 
concentrated to highly dispersed and described by the relative 
proportions of media coverage given to each issue.  A concentrated 
issue set, therefore, is one in which a few dominant issues attract 
most of the media coverage, and in a dispersed issue set, public 
attention is evenly distributed across most issues.  A dispersed 
issue set is characterized by the absence of dominant issues, with 
media coverage spread evenly across the issue set.
The concentration-dispersion aspect of issue-set complexity was not 
explicitly addressed in the original complexity 
proposition.  However, preliminary consideration of the concentration 
of the issue set using the data in this study indicated at face value 
that the higher the concentration of the issue set, the more likely 
there would be evidence of a heightened state of conflict in the 
focal bank-activist relationships.  Both concentrated and dispersed 
issue sets were observed, and variations were evident in the degree 
to which the issue set was more or less concentrated over 
time.  Because the number of issues addressed could not adequately 
capture issue-set complexity and because there were evident 
variations in issue-set concentration over time, this aspect of 
complexity is included in the revised EOAR model (see Figure 3).
Revised Proposition 1
As the number of activist publics organized by the issue set 
increases, organization-activist relationships move toward a conflict 
state.  When the number of activist publics organized by the issue 
set decreases, organization-activist relationships move toward a 
cooperative state on the conflict continuum.

Revised Proposition 2
As the concentration-dispersion of the issue set becomes more 
variable, as described by the range of variation in the proportion of 
media coverage given to issues, organization-activist relationships 
move toward a conflict state.
The Intensity Proposition
The intensity proposition of the EOAR model anticipates that as 
issue-set intensity increases, bank-activist relationships in the 
population move toward a conflict state, and when issue-set intensity 
decreases and the volume of media coverage declines, these same 
relationships move toward a cooperative state.  Limited support for 
the anticipated associations between important relationship outcomes 
was most evident from 1988 to 1994.  However, evidence emerged to 
suggest that these associations were more consistent when variations 
in issue-set intensity were extreme and more random when variations 
in intensity were small or moderate.  While the original intensity 
proposition accounted for variations in intensity, it did not 
differentiate between marginal and substantial variations.  The range 
of variation is thus made explicit in the revised intensity 
proposition of the EOAR model.  This anticipates that a more 
consistent relationship between variations in issue-set intensity and 
the evolution of organization-activist relationships is likely when 
the variations in intensity are more extreme (see Figure 3).
Revised Proposition 3
As variations in issue-set intensity become more extreme in range, 
organization-activist relationships are more likely to move toward a 
conflict or cooperative state in anticipated ways.  In other words, 
as issue-set intensity increases, organization-activist relationships 
move toward a conflict state, and as issue-set intensity decreases, 
organization-activist relationships move toward a cooperative 
state.  When variations in issue-set intensity decrease and the range 
of variation is small or moderate, the anticipated associations with 
the state of organization-activist relationships are less evident.
The Direction Proposition
The direction proposition of the EOAR model contends that as the 
public opinion environment becomes less favorable, 
organization-activist relationships in the population move toward a 
cooperative state. The associations between bank-activist 
relationships and the direction propositions of the EOAR were not 
supported as anticipated.  Instead, comparisons of issue-set 
direction for all three case studies supported the opposite 
contention; when the issue set became less favorable, bank-activist 
relationships moved toward a conflict state.
While they were quoted more frequently and more extensively, the 
major banks operated within a consistently unfavorable public opinion 
environment.  In exploring this finding, it is important to reiterate 
that many of the articles coded as unfavorable did not quote activist 
publics, but instead included commentary reporting the perspectives 
of activists or other actors, such as politicians and 
bureaucrats.  Journalists authoring opinion pieces and editorials 
made critical comments about the major banks, and these contributed 
to the direction of the public opinion environment, which was most 
often unfavorable.  The focus of media coverage in these case studies 
was very clearly on the dominant powers, the major banks, with the 
activities and comments of activist groups selectively and, in 
relative terms, minimally reported.  This gave the appearance of 
balanced reporting at times, but when total media coverage is 
systematically sampled, the imbalance evident illustrates the extent 
to which these publics were kept at the margins of mainstream 
discourse.  What transpired in this media coverage could quite 
reasonably be described as the ongoing discourse between a select 
group of journalists, bankers, bureaucrats, and politicians that was 
occasionally interrupted by comments from activists.
The direction proposition correctly anticipated that when the 
direction of the public opinion environment became unfavorable, the 
banks would respond by making fewer conflict statements and more 
cooperative and neutral statements.  While more evidence of 
cooperation in the form of cooperative statements from banks was 
apparent in the findings of this study, these statements alone were 
not enough to move the bank-activist relationship toward a 
cooperative state (see Figure 3).
Revised Proposition 4
	As the direction of the issue set in the public opinion environment 
becomes less favorable, organization-activist relationships in the 
population move toward a conflict state, and as that environment 
becomes more favorable, organization-activist relationships in the 
population move toward a cooperative state.
Limitations
A fundamental challenge confronted in this study was to meet the 
imperatives imposed by the ecological and evolutionary lens, as well 
as the demands of the comparative case study approach.  The former 
demanded that the phenomena of interest be examined over a timeframe 
adequate for observing change at the population level of analysis, 
and the latter demanded thick, rich description.  In negotiating the 
constraints imposed by the resources available to a single researcher 
over a limited period of time, I could not always pursue the 
explorations of other events and turning points that may have 
enriched this study.  For example, it may have been useful to apply 
multiple methods, or triangulation, including interviews with news or 
assignment editors to consider news routines to provide other 
perspectives for issue-set inertia.  Furthermore, to establish a 
robust coding scheme that was adequately detailed to describe this 
set of issues and yet extensive enough to be applied longitudinally, 
the issues comprising the issue set had to be broadly 
defined.  Issues defined within the issue set shifted in emphasis as 
events and topics changed.  However, more consistencies than 
differences emerged over time, and it was on the basis of these 
consistencies that the decisions shaping the issue set were founded.
The compromise between timeframe and the provision of the detail 
necessary to build comparative case research also manifested in the 
use of media coverage to describe the state of bank-activist 
relationships.  The state of bank-activist relationships were 
necessarily constructed using artefacts of those relationships, 
specifically evidence collected from statements published in the 
public domain.  An alternative way of describing the bank-activist 
relationship state that was not bound to media coverage would have 
been useful for providing further insights into the bank-activist 
relationship state.

Conclusions
The public opinion environment at the organizational population level 
of analysis is resistant to change over time and characterized by 
inertia.  This inertia was revealed only when the dimensions of the 
issue-set—stability, complexity, intensity, direction, and complexity 
of activist relationships—were identified and tracked over time. In 
other words, the degree of issue-set inertia is revealed by exploring 
the issue-set dimensions over time.  When issues of concern to 
organizations and publics emerge in the issue set comprising the 
public opinion environment at the population level of analysis, the 
stage may be set for the relationships between organizations and 
their publics for some years to come.  One strategic response to 
issue-set inertia for organizations is to differentiate an 
organization's activities and operations from its cohorts in the 
population, reframe the perceptions of their publics, and extend the 
foundations on which relationships with publics are built.  Such a 
contention is ripe for further exploration in the issues management 
professional literature. To ensure that their issues of concern 
attract consistent rather than intermittent attention, activist 
publics can adopt strategies to link issues of concern to the 
organizational population rather than just one or two organizations 
and, more importantly, to apply strategies that do not depend for 
impact on the limited exposure given to activists by the mainstream media.
The bank-activist relationships most likely to "fit" the public 
opinion environment as described by their preservation and 
reappearance over time were the relationships organized around 
multiple persistent issues.  These activist publics engaged not only 
with the organizations in the focal population, Australia's major 
banks, but with other organizations in other populations.  The 
existence of these activists and, therefore, their relationships with 
the banks was not limited to the negotiation of one issue with a few 
organizations but extended to multiple issues and many organizations 
in different populations.
Even while the major banks were enjoying record profits in the third 
case study, from 1995 to 2001, the public opinion environment 
remained unfavorable, with the banks enduring heavy and extensive 
criticism in what became known colloquially in the mid-1990s as 
"bank-bashing."  Banks responded to this increasingly unfavorable 
public opinion environment by refraining from being drawn into 
exchanges with activists, especially exchanges expressing conflict; 
they preferred instead to make more cooperative and neutral 
statements, intent on bringing public opinion back in support (Deegan 
et al., 2002).  The outcomes of these three case studies call into 
question the value of advice that encourages organizations to 
escalate their use of neutral statements in response to issues of 
concern.  The public opinion environment was consistently unfavorable 
as the flow of neutral statements from banks increased.  The outcomes 
of this study contest the value of this strategy, suggesting that the 
banks' "neutral" comments at best had no impact and, at worst, 
incensed the activists to the point where they were more vocal that 
ever.  If the major banks employed these strategies as a means of 
improving their image and encouraging more favorable media coverage, 
the outcomes of this study reveal nothing that would support such a 
contention.  If anything, it might be inferred from the increasing 
number of conflict statements that the banks' "neutral" comments 
spurred the activists on to assert their positions more aggressively 
and were quoted the media more frequently.  Without elaborating 
beyond the available evidence, the outcomes of these three case 
studies call into question the value of the advice of public 
relations practitioners that encourages organizations to deal with 
issues of concern and contention by seeking to downplay the issues 
and the activist public associated with those issues.
The concept of the variable public opinion environment of an 
organizational population as a set of issues that can be 
dimensionalized according to their stability, complexity, intensity, 
and direction emerges from the organizational and public opinion 
literature.  The dimensions proposed in both the original and refined 
EOAR model provide a robust lens that researchers can now apply and 
refine to detect and measure public opinion environment 
variation.  Although the relationships between variations in the 
public opinion environment of an organizational population and the 
evolving organization-activist relationships, as anticipated by the 
propositions of the EOAR model, were not extensively supported, this 
study captures, describes, and measures important properties of an 
organizational population's public opinion environment.  Therefore 
the ambition of this study, to enrich contemporary public relations 
theory, is achieved by conceptualizing and measuring variation in the 
public opinion environment of an organizational population, bringing 
this complex and multi-dimensional environment more sharply into 
focus for both scholars and practitioners.  This study challenges 
traditional approaches to public relations theory building.  Advanced 
within is a theoretical apparatus with which one of the most 
persistent but untested assumptions of public relations theory, 
continuous adaptation, can be investigated by focusing on the 
specific associations between variations in one important sector, the 
public opinion environment, and the evolving relationships that 
similarly constrained organizations have with their publics.

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Table 1  	
The Conflict Continuum – Concept Summary and Indicators
Conflict State
Cooperative State
All efforts by organizations and their activist publics in the 
population focus on
•	maximizing their own separate gains on issues of mutual concern.
•	minimizing their losses within a "win-lose" or self-gain orientation.
All efforts by organizations and their activist publics in the 
population focus on
•	reconciling their mutual interests.
•	cooperating to reach joint benefits.
•	resolving issues to their mutual satisfaction.

Indicators of a Conflict State

Indicators of a Cooperative State
Public statements attributed to relationship participants by the news media
•	explicitly reject cooperation as desirable and necessary or omit 
any reference to cooperation.
•	describe the relationship as being in a state of conflict.
•	focus on conflict-seeking and the points of dissension on the 
issues of mutual concern.
Public statements attributed to relationship participants by the news media
•	openly acknowledge cooperation as desirable and necessary.
•	suggest that cooperation is occurring and that consensus is evident.
•	focus on solution-seeking and the points of consensus on the issues 
of mutual concern .


Figure 1

The Evolutionary Model of Organization-Activist Relationships

The Public Opinion Environment
The Issue Set
Stability
(issue turnover)
Low
High
Complexity
(number of issues)
High
Low
Intensity
(volume of media coverage)
High
Low
Direction
(favourability to focal organizations)
Favorable
Unfavorable
Organization-Activist Relationships
The Conflict Continuum
Conflict
State
Cooperative
State



Figure 2

Summary of Findings—Evolutionary Model of Organization-Activist 
Relationships
The Public Opinion Environment
The Issue Set
Stability*
(issue turnover)
Low
(more issue turnover)
High
(lower issue turnover)
Complexity of Issues* (number of issues)
High
(more issues)
Low
(fewer issues)
Complexity of Activist Relationships
(number of activist relationships)
High
(more activist publics to negotiate)
  Low
(fewer activist publics to negotiate)
Intensity
(change in volume of media coverage)
Low to High
(volume of issue coverage increases dramatically)
High to low
(volume of media coverage decreases dramatically)
Direction
(favourability to focal organizations)
Unfavourable
Favourable
Organization-Activist Relationships
The Conflict Continuum
Conflict
State
Cooperative
State
Relationship-signaling statements
More relationship-signaling statements

•	More cooperative statements from organizations
•	More conflict statements from activists
Fewer relationship-signaling statements

•	More conflict statements from organizations
•	More cooperative statements from activists
*Note that the complexity (number of issues) proposition was not 
supported and the stability proposition was largely 
unsupported.  However, some weak associations were detected between 
variations in stability and complexity and variations in 
relationship-signalling statements.


Figure 3

The Revised Evolutionary Model of Organization-Activist Relationships
The Issue Set
Proposition 1
Complexity of activist relationships
High
Low
As the number of activist publics organized by the issue set 
increases, organization-activist relationships move toward a conflict 
state.  When the number of activist publics organized by the issue 
set decreases, organization-activist relationships move toward a 
cooperative state on the conflict continuum.
Proposition 2
Concentration
Variable
Constant
As the concentration-dispersion of the issue set becomes more 
variable, as described by the range of variation in the proportion of 
media coverage given to issues, organization-activist relationships 
move toward a conflict state.
Proposition 3
Intensity
Low to High
High to Low
As variations in issue-set intensity become more extreme in range, 
organization-activist relationships are more likely to move toward a 
conflict or cooperative state in anticipated ways.  In other words, 
as issue-set intensity increases, organization-activist relationships 
move toward a conflict state, and as issue-set intensity decreases, 
organization-activist relationships move toward a cooperative state.
Proposition 4
Direction
Unfavorable
Favorable
As the direction of the issue set in the public opinion environment 
becomes less favourable, organization-activist relationships in the 
population move toward a conflict state, and as that environment 
becomes more favourable, organization-activist relationships in the 
population move toward a cooperative state.
Organization-Activist Relationships
The Conflict Continuum
Conflict
State
Cooperative
State

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