THEORY Z + N:
The Role of Alaska Natives in Administration
Ray Barnhardt
Center for Cross-Cultural Studies
University of Alaska, Fairbanks
January, 1987
Paper originally presented at the
American Anthropological
Association Meeting, Philadelphia, PA, Dec. 5, 1986
THEORY Z + N:
The Role of Alaska Natives in Administration
by
Ray Barnhardt
Center for Cross-Cultural Studies
University of Alaska, Fairbanks
One year, back in the early 1970's, a new
principal/teacher assumed his duties in a small Tlingit village on an
island in southeast Alaska. He was employed by the State-Operated
School System, headquarted in Anchorage, and had taught previously in
rural village schools in other areas of the state, though this was
the first time he also had principal duties. He was assigned to this
particular school because the community had been expressing concern
about the lack of cultural sensitivity on the part of previous
teachers, and he had shown some interest in the local Native culture
in earlier teaching assignments, even though his own cultural roots
were still down in the panhandle of Texas.
Cognizant of his superiors concern that the
expectations of these politically aggressive villagers not get out of
hand, the new P/T decided to take the initiative and give them what
they wanted - a bit of local culture in the school curriculum. The
most obvious expression of the local Tlingit culture to an outsider
was the presence of totem poles at various locations in the
community. What better way to show concern for the local culture than
to have the students carve a totem pole as an after-school project,
and he himself would take the responsibility to see that it happened,
as a sign of official commitment to the communities
concerns.
The project didn't move along quite as quickly
as he had hoped, however, because the purchasing office in Anchorage,
through which he had ordered the cedar log that was to be transformed
into a totem pole, had difficulty in locating a supplier, and when
they did, it took nearly a month to have it shipped in from Seattle.
It hadn't occured to him that local residents might have been able to
acquire such a log from nearby forests at little or no expense to the
school. Given the late start, and sensing some impatience on the part
of the community, he decided to move right on in to the carving, so
he set aside an area in the back of his classroom, drew a design on
the log with a magic marker, and put the students to work with the
carving tools.
Each school day for the next six months the P/T
and his students put in an hour or so after school chipping away at
the log. By late spring they had completed the carving, had
colorfully painted the design, and were ready to present the result
of their effort to the community. The P/T decided to sponsor an
official unveiling and to erect the "totem pole" in front of the
school, so he put out notices inviting the villagers to participate
in the festive occasion. Finally, people in the community would see
that the school did appreciate their culture, and the "totem pole" would be a
prominent and permanent symbol of this
recognition.
On the appointed day, the P/T assembled all of
the students and the other teachers to participate in the ceremony,
and they gathered in front of the school and excitedly waited for the
villagers to arrive from the community below. An hour or so later, as
his excitement began to turn to anxiety, there was still no sign of
anyone coming up from the village to attend the ceremony. He was
accustomed to community events starting on "Indian time", but this
was beginning to try his patience. Finally, he spotted an old man
walking by and asked him where everyone was. Why weren't people
coming up to the school for the unveiling of the "totem pole"? After
some hesitation, the man responded, in a slightly admonishing tone,
indicating that people were not attending because they were offended
by what he had done, and this was their way of showing their
displeasure.
After the P/T had regained his composure, the
old man proceeded to explain that totem poles were not just carvings
that anyone could do at any time for any purpose. They had very
particular meanings and were used for very particular occasions. The
design was intended to tell a story, incorporating significant mythic
and contemporary figures, the selection and sequence of which was
determined by the clan affiliation of the sponsor and by the intended
purpose of the pole. The presentation of a totem pole was a major
event usually involving a ritual exchange between clans and
accompanied by a formal potlatch with many reciprocal obligations
associated with it. The principal/teacher had violated nearly all of
the critical cultural ingredients that go into the transformation of
a log into an authentic "totem pole". His effort at cultural
sensitivity, rather than appeasing the community, had led to further
alienation.
This incident illustrates several problems with
the way schools have typically addressed cultural issues in Native
American communities. One such problem is viewing Native culture as
artifact - as just another item that can be added to the curriculum
as though it were a subject of the past, rather than as a way of life
and a way of knowing that exists today and has implications for all
subject matter, as well as for when, where and how subject matter is
taught. Another problem illustrated by this story is the tendency of
educators to view themselves as the sole proprieters of useful
knowledge, not recognizing that theirs is a very specialized and
limited way of knowing, so that they often overlook the fact that
much knowledge is already present in the community that could be
effectively built upon to the schools advantage. These are
long-standing problems that have been treated extensively by other
authors (Barnhardt, 1982; Dubbs, 1982; Goody, 1982; Scollon & Scollon, 1981),
and need not be further elaborated here. There is a third problem reflected in
this story, however, that has not received
so much attention, and that is the more pervasive problem of using an
administrative framework of Western origin to provide services to a
non-Western cultural community. It is to this latter issue that this
paper is addressed.
As Raymond Callahan pointed out long ago in
Education and the Cult of Efficiency (1962), the
administrative framework for American schools has grown out of an
industrial model, which typically includes organizational features
such as a centralized authority structure, segmentation of
responsibilities, short term goal orientation, specialization of
skills, standardization of procedures, and an emphasis on efficiency
and productivity. These characteristics of administration and
organization are somewhat consistent with a society that prides
itself in its heterogeniety, mobility and individualism. However, not
all elements of American society have bought into the McDonalds
version of the American dream, including many Native American
communities.
The Tlingit people on the island in southeast
Alaska, for example, have maintained a distinctive lifestyle that is
still very much in harmony with the surrounding environment and is
based on a strong bond of kinship and sense of mutual obligation, all
of which foster a sustained tribal and clan identity which serves as
the primary source of cultural and psychological nurturance and
support for its members. All else, including the school, is
peripheral to this sense of bonded community. The principal/ teacher,
however, was an outsider to the tribal community and saw his primary
responsibility as being to his employer in Anchorage, and he based
his actions on the expectations emanating from the detached
institutional perspective of the central office. Despite his good
intentions to respond to the wishes of the community, he was blinded
by his adherence to a monolithic administrative framework that was
more likely to reward him for appeasing the restless Natives than for
providing a positive educational experience. Instead of recognizing
that he was just one more of a long string of well-meaning but
culturally deprived educators to pass through the community, he saw
the assignment as an opportunity to establish his reputation in the
institutional heirarchy as an innovative and responsive educator by
demonstrating his commitment to local cultural concerns. His
perception of the issue was framed, therefore, by his concern for how
his actions might be viewed by his superiors, rather than how they
would be viewed by the community. It probably didn't even occur to
him to check with the villagers before ordering the cedar log through
the central office in Anchorage. While his actions may have enhanced
his reputation in the eyes of the district administration, he did so
at the expense of his credibility in the community.
Emergent Institutions for Native
Communities
By the mid-1970's, the Native communities in
rural Alaska were no longer willing to serve as proving grounds for
aspiring educators. The State-Operated School System was too
monolithic, detached and cumbersome to adequately respond to the
disparate educational needs of the various Native groups throughout
Alaska, as well as to the needs of the military bases around the
state, which also came under its authority. In 1976, largely through
the political efforts of Native leaders, the State-Operated System
was dissolved, and in its place twenty-one new regional school
districts were established in rural Alaska. By placing control of the
schools in the hands of regional boards, it was hoped that the
educational services would be more responsive to local community
concerns.
One of the principal avenues by which this
increased responsiveness has been sought has been through an increase
in the presence of Native people themselves in the schools, as
teachers aides, bilingual instructors, and, to a more limited extent
as certificated teachers and administrators. As these new school
districts have evolved, with local people getting increasingly
involved from the policy-making to the classroom level, the posture
of their administration has slowly changed from a that of a distant,
all-knowing authoritarian regime to a more collaborative, adaptive
and facilitative form of administration. A reflection of this shift
is an increased use of local parent committees and policy-advisory
boards, as well as a greater utilization of local expertise in all
facets of the school operations, including the carving of totem
poles.
While there still exist a few mini-fiefdoms
around rural Alaska, most administrators and teachers now recognize
that their employer is the community, and their longevity requires a
certain degree of sensitivity to community wishes. At the same time,
communities are gradually developing a sense of ownership of their
schools and are taking an increased interest in what goes on in
them.
Theory Z
This change in the administrative climate in
the rural schools of Alaska over the past decade has run parallel to
changes in another sphere of organizational development beyond Alaska
- that of national and international corporation management. Just as
the original administrative structure of the State-Operated School
System reflected many of the essential features of the old industrial
management model described earlier, the new regional districts
adopted administrative practices that were representative of an
emerging model of corporate management that began to gain popularity
in the late 70's and early 80's, in response to the increasingly
successful challenge of Japanese and other foreign industries to
American industrial supremacy.
One of the popular proponents of this emerging
model of corporate management has been William Ouchi, who studied
both Japanese and American versions of two contrasting styles of
organization and management. He distinguishes these as Type A
(favored by Americans) and Type Z (favored by the Japanese). Out of
his analysis of Type Z organizations, Ouchi has identified a set of
management practices which he calls a "Theory Z" style of management
(Ouchi, 1981). The most significant distinguishing feature of this
style of management is its wholistic emphasis on people and the
environment in which they work. Employees are treated as integral and
central elements in the organization and are given an active role in
decision-making and self-governance. Employment is viewed as a
long-term mutual commitment in which the organization takes
responsibility for the social as well as the economic well-being of
its employees. The theory behind Theory Z is that employees who
develop a sense of ownership in and commitment to the organization in
which they work will be more dedicated to the goals of the
organization and thus will become more productive contributors. To
illustrate his point, Ouchi identifies Hewlett-Packard, Procter and
Gamble, and Eastman Kodak as three examples of successful American
corporations that use a Theory Z style of management.
Theory Z is not limited in its corporate
application to the multinational arena, however. Native regional
corportations in Alaska, formed to administer the land and money
acquired through the 1971 Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act, have
also adopted management principles that reflect aspects of a Theory Z
type of philosophy. As corporations with an exclusively Native
clientle, they have attempted to employ Native workers, to invest in
local enterprises, and to keep their shareholders informed and
actively involved in corporate affairs. Their actions have not always
been met with enthusiastic acceptance, however, and recurring debates
regarding the efficacy of the corporate structure as a vehicle for
serving Native interests indicate that a management style that is in
the best interest of an organization may not always be in the best
interest of its clientle.
In the early years of the Native regional
corporations, the Boards of Directors and the corporate executives
sometimes became so preoccupied with the economic goals of the
corporation that they overlooked the larger responsibility of
protecting the cultural well-being of their shareholders. For
example, in their pursuit of corporate objectives, some of the Native
corporations established their main offices in urban centers to be
near the financial and commercial markets, but in the process they
distanced themselves from their primary constitutency. As a result,
there has been a backlash against some of the corporation leaders
from Native people in the villages, where land and subsistence issues
often overshadow concerns for making a profit in the cash economy.
From the village shareholders perspective, the needs of the community
are seen as over-riding the needs of the corporation, with the
corporation expected to be of service to the community, rather than
the other way around.
This places the managers of the Native
corporations in a fundamentally different role than their
counterparts in other corporations, because they must deal with
multiple constituencies with sometimes competing and conflicting
expectations - a role which is not readily accomodated in the theory
behind Theory Z. It has not been enough for Native corporate leaders
to attend only to the internal dynamics of employee relations within
the corporation. They must also pay careful attention to the external
relations with their Native shareholders. And just as Native
corporations are seeking to redefine their modus operandi to be more
compatible with their cultural constituencies, so too are the
regional school districts having to adapt their administrative
posture as Native people become more active participants in their
operation, particularly as administrators.
Theory Z + N
In the context of Native controlled
institutions serving Native communities, Theory Z requires a Native
corollary (which I will refer to as "Theory Z + N"), which takes into
account the over-riding communal responsibility of such institutions,
and of those who manage them, particularly if the managers are
themselves Native. Theory Z + N takes into account the essential link
between the well-being of the institution and the well-being of the
community in which it is situated. While it may be possible to
establish a management style such that the internal environment of a
Native institution is organizationally coherent, operationally
efficient, and employee sensitive, all of that will be of no avail if
the overall thrust of the institution itself is not perceived by its
Native clientle as consistent with the needs it is intended to serve.
Such perceptions are created by many subtle features of the way an
institution operates, and the way an institution operates is in large
part a function of the attitudes and style of its
administration.
While administrators, through their own
deliberate action, can influence the way an institution interacts
with its clientle, there are many other ways, some obvious and some
not so obvious, in which institutions can present unintended
structural barriers to the accommodation of Native community concerns
and perspectives. Such barriers may exist in any feature of the
institution in which there is potential for different cultural
beliefs and practices to influence the attitudes and behavior of
institutional participants (cf. Barnhardt, 1985). This includes
implicit behavioral routines, such as the way people are expected to
communicate and interact with one another, and the way
decision-making and leadership are exercised. It also includes
explicit institutional routines, such as recruitment and selection
procedures, the way time and space are structured, and the criteria
and techniques used to judge peoples' performances. As can be seen by
the experience of the principal/teacher in southeast Alaska,
administrative action sometimes speaks louder than the rhetoric that
often accompanies it.
It is possible to reduce some of these
institutional barriers by training non-Native administrators to
recognize how organizational and administrative practices favor some
people over others, and encourage them to develop practices that take
cultural diversity into account. Such an approach does not, however,
address accompanying inequities in the distribution of power in the
institution, nor is it the most effective or efficient means of
building cultural sensitivity into institutional practices. Native
people, with appropriate training and the opportunity to bring their
unique perspective and skills to bear, are generally in a better
position to break down institutional barriers to Native
participation, because they have inherent within them the necessary
cultural predispositions. They must also, however, have the incentive
and support to take culturally appropriate initiatives in the
restructuring of organizational and administrative practices, or they
will simply perpetuate the inequities built into the existing
system.
Bringing administrative responsibility for the
delivery of services to the level of the Native community is a
critical step if those services are to reflect local cultural
considerations. In doing so, however, new kinds of demands are placed
on the role of the administrator which require a familiarity with and
sensitivity to features of the local cultural system that few people
from outside the system are likely to develop. It becomes imperative,
therefore, that Native people assume those administrative
responsibilities and be given the latitude to introduce their own "modus operandi" in response to the needs and conditions in the
community. Efforts to achieve "cultural fit" may require changes in
institutional features ranging from the simple rescheduling of daily
activities to a rethinking of the very function of the institution.
Persons fully immersed in the cultural community being served are in
the best position to recognize and act upon the discrepancies between
institutional and cultural practices that interfere with the
performance of the institution.
While moving the control of services closer to
the community and bringing Native people into decision-making and
management roles is a critical and necessary step toward transforming
Western bureaucratic institutions, such as schools, corporations or
government agencies, into more culturally sensitive institutions,
that step in itself is not sufficient to achieve the equity of
services that is needed. In addition to posessing all of the
bureaucratic and technical skills necessary to maintain a
Western-style institution, the Native administrator must also
understand how the institution can be made to fit into the Native
world without subverting essential features of that world. When such
a transformation of existing institutions is not possible without
losing more cultural ground than is gained, the Native administrator
must also have the skill to build new kinds of institutions that can
respect and be reconciled with the cultural values that are implicit
in a Theory Z + N approach to management.
Native Participation in
Decision-making
To be truly responsive to Native concerns, an
institution must not only reflect an awareness of Native cultural
values and practices, but it must also convey an attitude of respect
for those values and practices. This must be done in such a way that
Native people feel a sense of ownership with regard to the
institution and see it as incorporating their traditions and
perpetuating their interests. So long as the institutional
decision-making processes are in the hands of non-Native
decision-makers (regardless of how well-intentioned), Native people
are going to feel shut out as equal participants in those
institutions. But it is not enough to invite a token Native
representative to "bring a Native perspective" to the decision-making
arena, or to hire a token Native employee to integrate the staff and
appease the critics. Nor is it enough to have Native people in
professional or supervisory roles using conventional
bureaucratic-style criteria to perpetuate Western institutional
values. Such gratuitous avenues of participation are too easily
subverted by the weight of Western bureaucratic machinery and do
little to counteract the cultural distance between Western-style
institutions and Native people.
To develop a sense of institutional ownership,
Native people must feel they are a part of the action and are a party
to decision-making from top to bottom, beginning to end. They must be
on the delivery end of institutional services, not just on the
receiving end. If such a transformation is to take place,
institutions must adopt a participatory approach to decision-making,
whereby everyone that is affected by an institution, whether as
producer or consumer of institutional services, has an opportunity to
influence the way the institution operates. This requires multiple
avenues of access to the decision-making process, so that everyone
can contribute in a manner consistent with their relationship to the
institution and with their style of participation and
decision-making. It also involves a horizontal distribution of power,
so that all of the decision-making authority is not vested in a
top-down hierarchical structure. Participatory decision-making is at
the heart of any administrative process which seeks to strengthen the
degree of control that people have over their lives.
Increased Native participation in institutional
decision-making can be achieved through a variety of mechanisms.
These range from the establishment of affirmative action and career
ladder programs that strengthen Native presence in existing
institutions, to the creation of new institutions, where Native
people sustain their cultural community through their own system of
educational and service institutions. Other options include
contracting with Native organizations to provide services to Native
people; establishing Native councils or guardianships to oversee
Native interests; employing Native elders to advise in areas of
Native cultural and spiritual significance; and creating Native units
within existing institutions through which Native people can manage
their own affairs. It is through mechanisms such as these, and any
others that bring Natives into the decision-making arenas, that
Native people can begin to wield the power that is needed to shape
their own destiny. It is not enough to be the beneficiaries of
benevolent institutions. Native people must be full and equal
participants in the shaping and operation of those
institutions.
Cultural Bureaucrats, Advocates and
Mediators
Once inside an institution in a professional,
supervisory or decision-making role, Native people often face another
set of considerations that extend far beyond those of their
non-Native counterpart. Personal aspirations on the part of a Native
administrator can be bound to a whole range of cultural expectations
and obligations that rarely enter into non-Native considerations.
This is in part a function of differences in cultural traditions, but
it is also a function of the history of a beneficiary relationship
between Native people and the institutions of a dominant society
(i.e., the institution is there to provide certain benefits and those
who work in the institution are there to administer those benefits
for the people). As indicated earlier, Native administrators must not
only reconcile themselves to their role within the institution, they
are also expected to reconcile the relationship between the
institution and its clientele. This may not always be easy, because
the expectations of a Native community regarding an institution do
not always coincide with those of the persons responsible for
maintaining the institution. Given such circumstances, the
administrator-cum-leader must choose to align either with the
community being served or with the institution providing the
services, or attempt to establish a middle ground as a mediator
between the two. Each of these options leads to a different kind of
role for the administrator vis-a-vis the community and the
institution and, therefore, requires different kinds of
skills.
If primary allegiance is granted to the
institution, the Native administrator takes on the mantle of a "bureaucrat" and
is likely to pursue primarily personal career goals as a matter of survival in
the institution, with little willingness
to challelnge any lack of institutional response to the unique
concerns of the Native community. Having bought into the bureaucratic
system, efforts of such a person in the community are more likely to
be directed towards getting the community to understand the needs of
the institution, than to initiate actions or raise issues that
further complicate institutional tasks. The responsibility of the
bureaucrat (Native or non-Native) is to maintain the established
system as efficiently and effectively as possible by reducing the
variables that the system has to deal with to the minimum necessary
for survival. It is the rare bureaucrat that willingly introduces new
complicating variables to the system. If bureaucratic institutions
employ Native personnel with the intent of improving relations with
Native comminities, yet also expect them to take on a typical
bureaucratic posture, they should not be surprised if the same old
issues continue to resurface. While many benefits may be gained from
such an arrangement, the greater share of those benefits will go to
the individual and the institution, rather than to the community.
Little is likely to be gained in terms of Native
self-determination.
If, on the other hand, a Native person enters a
bureaucratic institution as an "advocate" for Native concerns while
retaining primary allegiance to the community, a different set of
skills than those of the bureaucrat come into play. The concern of
the community advocate is to bring community perspectives to the
attention of the institution and to mobilize community action to
achieve appropriate changes in the system. To achieve community
action goals, cultural, political and legal skills are often more
important than administrative or technical bureaucratic
skills.
Advocates tend to prefer positions that allow
them to keep in close touch with the community (e.g., field
office's), so that their institutional ties are often of a somewhat
tenuous nature. Faced with a choice between alienation from the
community and losing one's job, the advocate is likely to choose the
latter option. This can present the institution with a dilemma,
because while committment to institutional goals and procedures is
expected on the one hand, the expertise of the Native administrator
can also be vital to effective implementation of those goals and
procedures, on the other. The root of the dilemma is not, however, in
the lack of institutional committment by the community advocate, but
rather in the cultural distance between the functioning of the
institution and the needs of the community. From the community
advocate point of view, change must occur by bringing institutional
practices into closer alignment with the expectations of the
community being served, rather than the other way around. To the
extent that the community advocate adequately represents community
perspectives and the institution finds ways to accomodate those
perspectives, that institution becomes an instrument of empowerment
and service to Native people, and thus to all of society.
A third and more difficult posture that a
Native person can assume as an administrator in a
non-Native-dominated institution is that of "mediator" between the
non-Native and Native cultural worlds. While such a posture can lapse
into little more than fence-straddling, it also has the potential for
creative application of the bicultural skills embodied in Native
people. To function as mediator, a person must have a firm
understanding of the essential qualities that make up the two worlds
represented in the mediating arena, but just as important is an
ability to see beyond existing circumstances so as to be able to
create new options that reconcile differences in mutually beneficial
ways. Bicultural skills must, therefore, be reinforced with
institution-building skills, as well as with negotiation and
persuasion skills. Such a combination of administrator and cultural
broker can be a valuable asset to any institution, so long as the
institutional power brokers recognize that mediation and accomodation
are two-way processes.
To be a successful mediator, a person must be
able to establish co-membership in both the community and
institutional arenas. To be recognized and supported by Native people
and to have influence in Native arenas requires the ability to
display one's self in ways that are characteristically Native, and
the ability to articulate issues in terms that make sense to Native
people. To have credibility in the bureaucratic institutional arena
requires the ability to command authority and display competence in
ways that are characteristically non-Native. So to be an effective
mediator as a Native administrator, one has to be able to shift
readily back and forth between different authority structures,
leadership styles, decision-making processes, communication patterns,
and any other cultural variables that enter into the way people get
things done. The task of the mediator becomes one of constantly
juggling two sets of often conflicting expectations and trying to
determine where and how to seek changes that will reconcile the
differences in a mutually satisfactory manner.
Whether the task is to increase Native
participation in decision-making, improve communication, or develop
culturally appropriate organizational policies and procedures, there
is one set of skills that is paramount above all others, and that is
a thorough grounding in Native cultural beliefs and practices.
Without such grounding, administrators (Native or non-Native) are
likely to lack the knowledge and credibility necessary to bridge the
gap between existing institutions and Native people, regardless of
how well-intentioned they might be. Unless they are prepared to add
the "N" to Theory Z in their administrative practice, they are likely
to experience the same frustration as the principal/teacher in the
Tlingit community in southeast Alaska. Priority must be given,
therefore, to the preparation of skilled Native administrators who
can apply their talents to the development of the kind of culturally
sensitive institutional structures and practices that are required if
Alaska Natives are to achieve the degree of cultural and
institutional independence needed to exercise Native control over
Native affairs.
References
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Barnhardt, R. (1985). Maori Makes a
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Waikato.
Callahan, R. E. (1962). Education and the
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Dubbs, P. (1982). Cultural Definitions and
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Goody, J. (1982). Alternative Paths to
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