This case study was conducted among middle managers during a period of radical change within
the Norwegian child welfare service. Our goal was to explore how the middle managers handle
and respond to emotional dissonance and constraints in autonomy during the change process. We
collected data through group meetings, individual interviews, and focus groups. Prior research on
middle managers has shown their importance in the implementation of organizational change. We
propose that middle managers conduct emotion work, emotional labor, and emotional balancing
in response to the increased complexity of organizational expectations during change processes.
Further, we argue that the need for relevant emotion management reflects a threat to managers?
autonomy. Our findings indicate that middle managers feel emotional dissonance, due to their
position as both recipients and executers of organizational change. This makes them vulnerable
to questions of loyalty, and they feel they have no backstage where they can express themselves
openly. However, their ability to plan emotion management and to balance various conflicting
expectations enables them to maintain autonomy during a radical change process. Our basic
arguments and findings are summarized by applying the logic of a historistic functional model.
Author Biography
Hulda Mj?ll Gunnarsd?ttir, Institute of Media, Culture, and Social Sciences Faculty
of Social Sciences, University of Stavanger