In responding to Mutch's commentary on sociomateriality (this issue) our aim is to reassert a well-established tradition of plurality in theoretical approaches in information systems and organization research. We challenge his critique by proxy and exclusionary discourse in favour of identifying commonalities and mutuality among theories that explore subtle realism. Further, we maintain that ruling out novel perspectives and stifling innovation is likely to undermine any field of study. If there is a measure of healthy scholarship then it is surely our capacity to sustain the conditions that foster openness and experimentation in the framing and doing of our research endeavors
This contribution to the SIGPHIL workshop on reconciling the social and technical in IS research pro...
Drawing on a specific scenario from a contemporary workplace, I review some of the dominant ways tha...
This paper examines whether the core assumptions underlying the so-called multilevel perspective on ...
In responding to Mutch's commentary on sociomateriality (this issue) our aim is to reassert a well-e...
This article uses a case of oil and gas exploration as the starting point for methodological conside...
Scholars interested in theorizing sociomateriality debate whether social and material are discree...
Our intent in this commentary is to support the turn to materiality in organizational research, and ...
The concept of “sociomateriality” challenges assumed distinctions between the human and social, on t...
Niemimaa (2016) argues that agential realism (Barad 2003) represents a radical form of sociomaterial...
The case for “analytical dualism” as a means of approaching sociotechnical action is presented as an...
Niemimaa (2016) argues that agential realism (Barad 2003) represents a radical form of sociomaterial...
Sociomateriality represents an emergent philosophical stance that instantiates an ontological turn t...
Sociomateriality, in helping to overcome the longstanding dualism between the social and the technic...
Sociomateriality is gaining momentum and is by now characterized as a research stream in the informa...
This contribution to the SIGPHIL workshop on reconciling the social and technical in IS research pro...
This contribution to the SIGPHIL workshop on reconciling the social and technical in IS research pro...
Drawing on a specific scenario from a contemporary workplace, I review some of the dominant ways tha...
This paper examines whether the core assumptions underlying the so-called multilevel perspective on ...
In responding to Mutch's commentary on sociomateriality (this issue) our aim is to reassert a well-e...
This article uses a case of oil and gas exploration as the starting point for methodological conside...
Scholars interested in theorizing sociomateriality debate whether social and material are discree...
Our intent in this commentary is to support the turn to materiality in organizational research, and ...
The concept of “sociomateriality” challenges assumed distinctions between the human and social, on t...
Niemimaa (2016) argues that agential realism (Barad 2003) represents a radical form of sociomaterial...
The case for “analytical dualism” as a means of approaching sociotechnical action is presented as an...
Niemimaa (2016) argues that agential realism (Barad 2003) represents a radical form of sociomaterial...
Sociomateriality represents an emergent philosophical stance that instantiates an ontological turn t...
Sociomateriality, in helping to overcome the longstanding dualism between the social and the technic...
Sociomateriality is gaining momentum and is by now characterized as a research stream in the informa...
This contribution to the SIGPHIL workshop on reconciling the social and technical in IS research pro...
This contribution to the SIGPHIL workshop on reconciling the social and technical in IS research pro...
Drawing on a specific scenario from a contemporary workplace, I review some of the dominant ways tha...
This paper examines whether the core assumptions underlying the so-called multilevel perspective on ...