Understanding and Managing Risk in Complex Construction Projects A Study through the Lens of Institutional Logics
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Date
2025-06-24
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Abstract
This thesis explores how project professionals understand and manage risk in large and
complex construction projects, with a focus on how these practices are shaped by institutional
logics. While traditional risk management approaches emphasize structured, calculable
processes aimed at minimizing cost, time, and scope deviations, this study adopts a more
situated perspective, highlighting how risk is interpreted and negotiated in practice. Drawing
on twenty semi-structured interviews with professionals across public and private
construction projects in Sweden, the study identifies three dominant institutional logics,
market, state, and professional, each offering a distinct framing of risk. The findings show
that these logics coexist and often compete, creating institutional complexity that shapes both
how risks are understood and how they are managed. Risk emerges not only as a technical or
financial concern but also as a context-dependent and interpretive concept, influenced by
organizational roles, project conditions, and normative expectations. The study contributes to
a deeper understanding of how formal risk frameworks are adapted in practice, and how
institutional environments structure the possibilities and limitations of risk work in complex
project settings.
Description
MSc in Management
Keywords
Risk Management, Institutional Logics, Construction Projects, Uncertainty, Institutional Complexity, Ambiguity, Project Practices, Professional Judgment