In Keywords: A vocabulary of culture and society, Raymond Williams has entries on "community" and on "culture" and on "society" and on "institution" and on "industry" but not on "organization" or "company."

Community Ê Ê from L for common (i) common people, opposed to rank (14-17c) (ii) state or organized society (14c-) (iii) people of a district (18c-) (iv) quality of holding something in common--community of interests or community of goods (16c-) (v) sense of common identity and characteristics (16c-) i-iii = actual groups; iv-v = relationships in 19c community felt to be more immediate than society . . . increasingly expressing the more direct, total and more significant relationships (not abstract, formal, instrumental relations of state or society) led to complex concept that on one hand relates to direct common concern and on the other hand the materialization of forms of common organization.

Community can be the warmly persuasive word to describe an existing set of relationships, or the warmly persuasive word to describe an alternative set of relationships. What is most important, perhaps, is that unlike all other terms of social organization (state, nation, society, etc.) it seems never to be used unfavourably, and never to be given any possible opposing or distinguishing term. (p. 76)