Organisational routines embed and are increasingly embedded within IT artefacts. In this paper, I challenge the conventional notion that warrants the primacy of human activities in the study of routines and bring artefacts in general and IT artefacts in particular to the very centre of my theorising. Through an in-depth case study of crown prosecutors’ work, I endeavour to explain the way legislative and IT artefacts are implicated in the transformation of police-prosecutor routines. I show that legislative artefacts play a constitutive role that generates a new role position and a new system of social practices while IT artefacts serve a regulative function that enforces a newly-programmed sequence of steps onto pre-existing practices. I a...
The article analyses the ways in which technology and law disperse, channel and reassemble agency in...
This paper explores the role of invested powerful business actors in the criminalisation process as ...
Existing theories of organisational routines have generally had simplistic and extreme views of arti...
Drawing on the notion of generative mechanisms as constitutive rules, this paper advocates a shift a...
In recent years, police forces in the United Kingdom have introduced various technologies that alter...
In recent years, police forces in the United Kingdom have introduced various technologies that alter...
In recent years, UK police forces have introduced various technologies that alter the methods by whi...
This article analyses the implications of the greater use of technology and information in probatio...
Purpose The main purpose of this research is to analyse the socio‐technical consequences deriving f...
As we log into our computers, type in our passwords and connect to our extended world of networks, c...
Technological elements and scientific knowledge are steadily transforming both the traditional image...
This article examines the challenges of functional adaptation faced by the police in response to tec...
Information technology (IT) extensively regulates organizational processes in contemporary organizat...
In this paper we use activity theory to illuminate our understanding of the emergence of an innovati...
International audienceSeveral studies have enriched our understanding of routine dynamics by sheddin...
The article analyses the ways in which technology and law disperse, channel and reassemble agency in...
This paper explores the role of invested powerful business actors in the criminalisation process as ...
Existing theories of organisational routines have generally had simplistic and extreme views of arti...
Drawing on the notion of generative mechanisms as constitutive rules, this paper advocates a shift a...
In recent years, police forces in the United Kingdom have introduced various technologies that alter...
In recent years, police forces in the United Kingdom have introduced various technologies that alter...
In recent years, UK police forces have introduced various technologies that alter the methods by whi...
This article analyses the implications of the greater use of technology and information in probatio...
Purpose The main purpose of this research is to analyse the socio‐technical consequences deriving f...
As we log into our computers, type in our passwords and connect to our extended world of networks, c...
Technological elements and scientific knowledge are steadily transforming both the traditional image...
This article examines the challenges of functional adaptation faced by the police in response to tec...
Information technology (IT) extensively regulates organizational processes in contemporary organizat...
In this paper we use activity theory to illuminate our understanding of the emergence of an innovati...
International audienceSeveral studies have enriched our understanding of routine dynamics by sheddin...
The article analyses the ways in which technology and law disperse, channel and reassemble agency in...
This paper explores the role of invested powerful business actors in the criminalisation process as ...
Existing theories of organisational routines have generally had simplistic and extreme views of arti...