Call for Papers — 1st Edition
Important Dates
Registration (June 06-16)
FSJES Marrakech

ITO'26 Innovation & Organizational
Transformations

L-ERMESSAD

The Laboratory of Studies and Research in Management, Economics, Social Sciences, Administration and Law (L-ERMESSAD), affiliated with Cadi Ayyad University of Marrakech, is pleased to invite you to participate in the first edition of the international conference: Innovation and Organizational Transformations (ITO’26) which will take place on June 26 and 27, 2026 at the conference center of Cadi Ayyad University of Marrakech.

This first edition of the international conference: Innovation and Organizational Transformations will focus on the following theme:

"Resilience and Agility of Organizations in the Era of Sustainable Transformation: Between Managerial Innovations, Institutional Reforms and Equity Challenges".

June 26–27, 2026 Marrakech, Morocco FSJES – Cadi Ayyad University

Conference Overview

The Laboratory of Studies and Research in Management, Economics, Social Sciences, Administration and Law (L-ERMESSAD), affiliated with Cadi Ayyad University of Marrakech, is pleased to invite you to participate in the first edition of the international conference: Innovation and Organizational Transformations (ITO’26) which will take place on June 26 and 27, 2026 at the conference center of Cadi Ayyad University of Marrakech.

The ITO international conference was designed as a time for exchange around research in management sciences, economics, law, social sciences..., focusing on the transformation processes of organizations, their conditions for success, as well as the risks and tensions they generate for the actors involved. It is about questioning the way organizations renew their practices, structures, and tools to adapt to a Volatile, Uncertain, Complex, and Ambiguous (VUCA) environment.

Being interdisciplinary, the ambition of the conference is to bring together scientific and professional contributions in order to, on the one hand, discuss innovative managerial practices and the salient questions raised by the verbatim "doing the right things" and "doing things right"; and on the other hand, to debate emerging research themes and current issues (but also solutions) in order to identify managerial avenues for managers' actions.

Rationale

In a global context marked by multiple crises (climatic, economic, geopolitical, technological...), organizations today evolve in an ambiguous, turbulent, and uncertain environment. The profound and sometimes irreversible transformations organizations face challenge traditional modes of organization, governance, and value creation (Howard-Grenville et al., 2014).

Thus, organizational performance can no longer be thought of independently of the ability to adapt and transform. Organizations, whether public, private, or NGOs... are forced to rethink their managerial innovation strategies and accelerate their transition towards more agile management aimed at strengthening their resilience capacity in the face of, on the one hand, multidimensional transformations (Autissier, 2013) and, on the other hand, polycrisis situations (Alberts, 2011).

In this context, resilience and agility emerge as fundamental strategic capabilities, enabling respectively the absorption of shocks and the rapid reconfiguration of resources and organizational models (Teece et al., 2016; Duchek, 2020). These notions appear as central analytical frameworks to understand the ability of organizations to absorb disturbances, apprehend crises, and reconfigure their resources to maintain their performance in unstable environments (Sutcliffe & Vogus, 2003; Vogus & Sutcliffe, 2007).

The literature review defines organizational resilience as the ability of an organization to anticipate, resist, and overcome major circumstances (Lengnick-Hall et al., 2011; Duchek, 2020) and maintain a positive adjustment in the face of difficult conditions. Agility, on the other hand, refers to an organization's ability to apprehend and act quickly in response to changes in its environment, through adjustment mechanisms and strategic orientation (Teece, Peteraf, & Leih, 2016). Agile management is thus considered a social process that fosters collaboration and interaction between human capital and its environment (Whitworth & Biddle, 2007). The regulation of individual behaviors is an essential lever to sustainably maintain the resilience, agility, and reliability of organizational structures (Hollnagel, Journé, & Laroche, 2009).

At the same time, sustainable transformation redefines the very criteria of organizational performance by integrating environmental, social, and governance (ESG) dimensions. It is not limited to technical adjustments but involves profound changes in business models, governance systems, and measurement and control mechanisms (Geels, 2002; Christensen et al., 2021). However, these transformations take place in specific institutional and societal contexts, where organizational dynamics are closely linked to public policies, regulatory frameworks, and equity issues.

Thus, the analysis of organizational resilience and agility requires an integrated approach based on triple interdependence:

  1. Organizational transformations, linked to managerial innovations and dynamic capabilities;
  2. Institutional transformations, which structure incentives and governance modes (North, 1990; DiMaggio & Powell, 1983);
  3. Societal dimensions, notably issues of inclusion, inequality, and territorial cohesion (Bapuji et al., 2020).

In the Moroccan context, this interdependence takes on a particular dimension. The country faces simultaneous challenges of climate transition, institutional modernization, and social inclusion. International diagnostics highlight both the resilience of the Moroccan economy and the need for structural reforms to support sustainable and inclusive growth, particularly regarding climate risk management, the digital transformation of the state, and the reduction of territorial inequalities (World Bank, 2022; IMF, 2024; OECD, 2025).

In this framework, organizational resilience cannot be considered independently of institutional capacities and equity conditions. Social protection reforms, digitalization policies for public services, and territorial development strategies illustrate the need to articulate economic efficiency, social inclusion, and sustainable governance (CESE, 2024; HCP, 2025).

However, these transformations are accompanied by structuring tensions: between resilience and agility, performance and sustainability, innovation and regulation, or digitalization and equity. These tensions reflect the non-linear nature of transformation trajectories and highlight the need to move beyond fragmented disciplinary approaches in favor of integrated and multi-level analyses.

In this perspective, this edition of the ITO’26 conference aims to mobilize various disciplines of management sciences, economics, law... to explore the mechanisms, conditions, and limits of organizational resilience and agility in the era of sustainable transformation, paying particular attention to the specificities of emerging economies including Morocco.

BIBLIOGRAPHY AND REFERENCES

  • - Alberts, D. S. (2011). The agility advantage: A survival guide for complex enterprises and endeavors. Center for Advanced Concepts and Technologies.
  • - Autissier, D., Houlière, S., & Lange, A. (2013). Penser le management. Éditions Eyrolles.
  • - Bapuji, H., Ertug, G., & Shaw, J. D. (2020). Organizations and societal economic inequality: A review and way forward. Academy of Management Annals, 14(1), 60–91.
  • - Conseil Economique, Social et Environnemental (CESE). (2024). Généralisation de l’AMO : bilan d’étape.
  • - Christensen, H. B., Hail, L., & Leuz, C. (2021). Mandatory CSR and sustainability reporting. Review of Accounting Studies, 26(3), 1176–1248.
  • - DiMaggio, P. J., & Powell, W. W. (1983). The iron cage revisited... American Sociological Review, 48(2), 147–160.
  • - Duchek, S. (2020). Organizational resilience: A capability-based conceptualization. Business Research, 13, 215–246.
  • - El Fiad, M., & Baaddi, M. (2025). Résilience, frugalité et agilité... International Journal of Applied Management and Economics, 2(15), 265–279.
  • - Geels, F. W. (2002). Technological transitions as evolutionary reconfiguration processes... Research Policy, 31(8–9), 1257–1274.
  • - Haut-Commissariat au Plan (HCP). (2025). Lutte contre la pauvreté, réduction des inégalités...
  • - Hollnagel, E., Journé, B., & Laroche, H. (2009). Fiabilité et résilience... M@n@gement, 12(4), 224–229.
  • - Howard-Grenville, J., Buckle, S. J., Hoskins, B., & George, G. (2014). Climate Change and Management. Academy of Management Journal, 57(3), 615-623.
  • - International Monetary Fund (IMF). (2024). Morocco: 2024 Article IV consultation.
  • - Koch, T., & Denner, N. (2025). What is greenwashing? Journal of Sustainable Business. 10(17).
  • - Lengnick-Hall, C. A., et al. (2011). Developing a capacity for organizational resilience... Human Resource Management Review, 21(3), 243–255.
  • - North, D. C. (1990). Institutions, institutional change and economic performance. Cambridge University Press.
  • - Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (2025). National urban policy review of Morocco.
  • - Sutcliffe, K. M., & Vogus, T. J. (2003). Organizing for resilience. Positive Organizational Scholarship.
  • - Teece, D. J., Peteraf, M., & Leih, S. (2016). Dynamic capabilities and organizational agility... California Management Review, 58(4), 13–35.
  • - Vogus, T. J., & Sutcliffe, K. M. (2007). Organizational resilience... IEEE International Conference.
  • - Whitworth, E., & Biddle, R. (2007). The social nature of agile teams. IEEE Computer Society, 26–36.
  • - World Bank. (2022). Morocco country climate and development report.

Submission Form

Complete this form to submit your paper proposal to the ITO'26 Scientific Committee. All fields marked with an * are required.

1 Main Author
2 Co-author (optional)
3 Title of the paper
4 Thematic Axis
5 Abstract of the paper
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Separate keywords with commas
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6 Detailed synthesis
Required structure — Your synthesis (≤ 2.5 pages) must cover: context, theoretical frameworks, state of the art, problem statement, objectives, methodology, preliminary results, and potential contributions.
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7 Bibliography
Mandatory APA norms — The bibliography must include between 10 and 15 fundamental references, presented strictly according to APA 7th edition norms.
Example: Last Name, F. (Year). Book Title. Publisher.
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