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This volume focuses on new ways of working, and explores
implications of these new practices with a particular emphasis on
the place occupied by technology, materiality and bodies within
contemporary working configurations. It draws together an
international range of scholars to examine diverse subjects such
as: the gig economy, social media as a work space, the role of
materiality in living labs, managerial techniques and
organizational legitimacy. Drawing on global perspectives, from
France to Nigeria, this book presents a fascinating examination of
the many new ways people are working, and relating to their work.
Part of the esteemed Technology, Work and Globalization series,
this book is valuable reading for scholars working on
organizational studies, ethnography, technology management, and
management more generally.
Materiality, Rules and Regulation: New Trend in Management and
Organization Studies concentrates on the relationship of rules and
regulation to the materiality of artefacts, practices, and
organizations. It combines the recent scholarly interest on
sociomateriality with a focus on regulation and rules.
"Materiality and Space" focuses on how organizations and managing
are bound with the material forms and spaces through which humans
act and interact at work. It concentrates on organizational
practices and pulls together three separate domains that are rarely
looked at together: sociomateriality, sociology of space, and
social studies of technology. The contributions draw on and combine
several of these domains, and propose analyses of spaces and
materiality in a range of organizational practices such as
collaborative workspaces, media work, urban management, e-learning
environments, managerial control, mobile lives, institutional
routines and professional identity. Theoretical insights are also
developed by Pickering on the material world, Lyytinen on
affordance, Lorino on architexture and Introna on sociomaterial
assemblages in order to delve further into conceptualizing
materiality in organizations.
This volume focuses on new ways of working, and explores
implications of these new practices with a particular emphasis on
the place occupied by technology, materiality and bodies within
contemporary working configurations. It draws together an
international range of scholars to examine diverse subjects such
as: the gig economy, social media as a work space, the role of
materiality in living labs, managerial techniques and
organizational legitimacy. Drawing on global perspectives, from
France to Nigeria, this book presents a fascinating examination of
the many new ways people are working, and relating to their work.
Part of the esteemed Technology, Work and Globalization series,
this book is valuable reading for scholars working on
organizational studies, ethnography, technology management, and
management more generally.
This edited book examines the relationship between the materiality
of artefacts and managerial techniques, combining the recent
scholarly interest on socio-materiality with a focus on management.
Exploring managerial techniques, the social and material tools used
by actors to guide or facilitate collective activities, topics
include their socio-materiality, performative dimension, role in
managerial control, relationship to organisational space and
relationship to organisational legitimacy. This volume particularly
explores the valuation and legitimation practices or processes
involving managerial techniques, their modalities, specificities
and involvement in collective activity within organisations. The
overall aim of the chapters is to explore in different ways and
instances the way in which material artefacts are able to inscribe
and enforce managerial action which affects daily work practices.
This edited book examines the relationship between the materiality
of artefacts and managerial techniques, combining the recent
scholarly interest on socio-materiality with a focus on management.
Exploring managerial techniques, the social and material tools used
by actors to guide or facilitate collective activities, topics
include their socio-materiality, performative dimension, role in
managerial control, relationship to organisational space and
relationship to organisational legitimacy. This volume particularly
explores the valuation and legitimation practices or processes
involving managerial techniques, their modalities, specificities
and involvement in collective activity within organisations. The
overall aim of the chapters is to explore in different ways and
instances the way in which material artefacts are able to inscribe
and enforce managerial action which affects daily work practices.
Materiality and Space focuses on how organizations and managing are
bound with the material forms and spaces through which humans act
and interact at work. It concentrates on organizational practices
and pulls together three separate domains that are rarely looked at
together: sociomateriality, sociology of space, and social studies
of technology. The contributions draw on and combine several of
these domains, and propose analyses of spaces and materiality in a
range of organizational practices such as collaborative workspaces,
media work, urban management, e-learning environments, managerial
control, mobile lives, institutional routines and professional
identity. Theoretical insights are also developed by Pickering on
the material world, Lyytinen on affordance, Lorino on architexture
and Introna on sociomaterial assemblages in order to delve further
into conceptualizing materiality in organizations.
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