The ideas presented in this paper have emerged from our curiosity about how technological objects might be leveraged as more than mere evidence in IS research. As constructions of a particular time and place, objects can tell us a great deal about the people, organisations and cultures that produced and used them. Objects reflect the values, beliefs and activities of those people, organisations, and cultures. But many IS scholars following a sociomaterial agenda continue to see objects as no more than background facts that play a supporting role in our research. There is little guidance in the IS literature on how objects might participate more directly and fully in our research and how we as scholars should engage with them. In this paper,...
Ethnographic research is a form of qualitative inquiry that creates deep and rich understanding o...
This contribution to the SIGPHIL workshop on reconciling the social and technical in IS research pro...
Social theorists increasingly recognise that material things often play vital roles in the causation...
The ideas presented in this paper have emerged from our curiosity about how technological objects mi...
Sociomateriality represents an emergent philosophical stance that instantiates an ontological turn t...
While materiality is an important concept in IS research, there is little consensus as to how mater...
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...
The study of sociomateriality in Information Systems (IS) research has been increasing its impact an...
This paper seeks to contribute to better understanding of information within the information systems...
Challenges to identifying the information systems (IS) field originate within the community, from ex...
This paper seeks to offer an assessment on the extent to which we, as IS academics, have been faithf...
The concept of “sociomateriality” challenges assumed distinctions between the human and social, on t...
Ethnographic research is a form of qualitative inquiry that creates deep and rich understanding of a...
Researchers who want to adopt a sociomaterial approach often find themselves confused regarding rese...
Ethnographic research is a form of qualitative inquiry that creates deep and rich understanding o...
This contribution to the SIGPHIL workshop on reconciling the social and technical in IS research pro...
Social theorists increasingly recognise that material things often play vital roles in the causation...
The ideas presented in this paper have emerged from our curiosity about how technological objects mi...
Sociomateriality represents an emergent philosophical stance that instantiates an ontological turn t...
While materiality is an important concept in IS research, there is little consensus as to how mater...
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...
The study of sociomateriality in Information Systems (IS) research has been increasing its impact an...
This paper seeks to contribute to better understanding of information within the information systems...
Challenges to identifying the information systems (IS) field originate within the community, from ex...
This paper seeks to offer an assessment on the extent to which we, as IS academics, have been faithf...
The concept of “sociomateriality” challenges assumed distinctions between the human and social, on t...
Ethnographic research is a form of qualitative inquiry that creates deep and rich understanding of a...
Researchers who want to adopt a sociomaterial approach often find themselves confused regarding rese...
Ethnographic research is a form of qualitative inquiry that creates deep and rich understanding o...
This contribution to the SIGPHIL workshop on reconciling the social and technical in IS research pro...
Social theorists increasingly recognise that material things often play vital roles in the causation...