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- W108184454 abstract "This contribution to SIGPHIL workshop on reconciling social and technical in IS research proposes a sociotechnical approach that addresses many issues related to long-standing duality of social/human versus technical/material. It shows that a sociotechnical approach based on work system concepts 1) highlights and potentially bypasses extremely basic ontological stumbling blocks in IS research, 2) incorporates many of topics and concerns of original sociotechnical school, 3) illuminates issues related to duality of social/human versus technical/material, and 4) addresses these topics using concepts and terminology that are much easier to understand than highly sophisticated concepts in emerging discourse about sociomateriality. While not starting with assumptions such as constitutive entanglement of people, technologies, and organizations, this approach addresses some of topics in sociomateriality discourse and leads to interpretations that may be useful to that discourse as it continues to unfold. After illustrating IS discipline's pervasive problem of accepting fundamentally different meanings for same concepts, it shows that work system framework, work system life cycle model, and a metamodel underlying work system framework provide a useful scaffolding for examining and interpreting duality of social/human versus technical/material in real world situations. Steps toward Reconciling Social/Human and Material/Technical Questions about intersection of social/human and technical/material in relation to information systems go back to early sociotechnical research, include vigorous debates about actor network theory, structuration theory, and related topics. More recently these questions have reemerged in form of research related to sociomateriality. The description of AISSIGPHIL workshop at ICIS 2011 quotes Call for Papers for MIS Quarterly's Special Issue on Sociomateriality by saying since its infancy, IS research has struggled to reconcile technological and human/social nature of information systems, and to investigate them in a comprehensive and coherent way. MIS Quarterly's Call for Papers goes on to say, Most IS research assumes a conventional duality between technological (material) and social/human. ... As we understand intimate tangle of IS and organizations, their coemergence, co-production, and mediation, it becomes more urgent for 'conceptual bubble' of social/material duality to be burst (Woolgar 2002). (Cecez-Kecmanovic et al. 2011) According to MIS Quarterly's Call for Papers, it is possible to bypass social/material duality through notion of sociomateriality, which implies that things, technologies, people, and organizations do not have inherently determinate meanings, boundaries, or properties. ... Technologies, people, and organizations are seen as constitutively entangled, implying that we can separate them only analytically. Orlikowski and Scott (2008) refers to the inherent" @default.
- W108184454 created "2016-06-24" @default.
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- W108184454 date "2011-01-01" @default.
- W108184454 modified "2023-09-27" @default.
- W108184454 title "Reconciling the Social/Human and Technical/Material in IS Research without Trying too Hard" @default.
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