Abstract Boards govern by closing. They approve strategy, appoint and remove chief executives, ratify major commitments, oversee risk, and intervene when organizational direction or legitimacy is at stake. Yet whether a given act of closure is sound is determined largely before it occurs, in the interval during which an encounter is still forming into a governable issue. This paper develops the construct of board holding: the disciplined preservation of that interval, so that what a board senses can become speakable, what is speakable can become choosable, and what is chosen can be incorporated into sustained practice, rather than collapsing prematurely into decision, paralysis, or displacement. The central contribution is a reframing. Much governance theory locates board quality in the legitimacy and correctness of decisions. This paper locates it one step earlier, in the formation of the issue that the board decides. Drawing on a purposive corpus of board-experience accounts treated as practitioner discourse, and on established work in behavioral governance and organizational sensemaking, the paper specifies what the interval is for, how it characteristically collapses, and how holding differs from adjacent constructs such as psychological safety. Board failure, on this account, is frequently not a failure to receive signals but a failure to convert them into judgment before circumstances convert them into consequence. Boards govern well not by knowing more, meeting more, or monitoring harder, but by preserving the interval in which ambiguity becomes judgment. Keywords: board holding; the interval before closure; corporate governance; board of directors; judgment formation; board effectiveness; psychological safety; qualitative theory building.
David S Morgan (Thu,) studied this question.