This book is a useful text for advanced students of MIS and ICT courses, and for those studying ICT in related areas: Management and Organization Studies, Cultural Studies, and Technology and Innovation. As ICT's permeate every sphere of society-business, education, leisure, government,
etc.-it is important to reflect the character and complexity of the interaction between people and computer, between society and technology. For example, the user may represent a much broader set of actors than 'the user' conventionally found in many texts: the operator, the customer, the citizen,
the gendered individual, the entrepreneur, the 'poor', the student. Each actor uses ICT in different ways. This book examines these issues, deploying a number of methods such as Actor Network Theory, Socio-Technical Systems, and phenomenological approaches. Management concerns about strategy and
productivity are covered together with issues of power, politics, and globalization. Topics range from long-standing themes in the study of IT in organizations such as implementation, strategy, and evaluation, to general analysis of IT as socio-economic change. A distinguished group of contributors,
including Bruno Latour, Saskia Sassen, Robert Galliers, Frank Land, Ian Angel, and Richard Boland, offer the reader a rich set of perspectives and ideas on the relationship between ICT and society, organizational knowledge and innovation.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- Introduction
- Part I: Foundations
- 1: Claudio Ciborra: Encountering Information Systems as a Phenomenon
- 2: Ian O.Angell and Fernando M. Ilharco: Solution is the Problem: A Story of Transitions and Opportunities
- 3: Bruno Latour: On Using ANT for Studying Information Systems: A (Somewhat) Socratic Dialogue
- 4: Saskia Sassen: Towards a Sociology of Information Technology
- Part II: Theories at Work
- 5: Ole Hanseth: Knowledge as Infrastructure
- 6: Richard J. Boland, Jr.: An Ecology of Distributed Practice Involving Knowledge Work
- 7: Eric Monteiro: Actor Network Theory and Cultural Aspects of Interpretive Studies
- 8: Jannis Kallinkos: Farewell to Constructivism: Technology and Context-Embedded Action
- 9: Chrisanthi Avgerou and Shirin Madon: Framing IS Studies: Understanding the Context of IS Innovation
- Part III: Substantive Issues and Applications
- 10: Robert Hunter Wade: Bridging the Digital Divide: New Route to Development or New Form of Dependency
- 11: Steve Smithson and Prodromos Tsiavos: Re-Constructing Information Systems Evaluation
- 12: Robert D. Galliers: Reflections on Information Systems Strategizing
- 13: Richard L. Baskerville and Frank Land: Socially Self-Destructing Systems