Materiality of connectivity in the networked society: A sociomaterial perspective
Date
2014
Authors
Cecez-Kecmanovic, Dubravka
Boell, Sebastian
Campbell, John
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Volume Title
Publisher
Australasian Conference on Information Systems
Abstract
This paper contributes to an emerging discourse on the meaning of technology in today's networked society by exploring connectivity as a hallmark of the networked society. Based on an empirical study of professionals, arguably the forerunners of the networked society, the paper seeks to answer how connectivity matters. Rich narratives from in-depth interviews reveal the diverse ways materiality of connectivity is experienced and performed in the work practices and private lives of professionals. These findings challenge existing conceptual treatments of connectivity as a technical, social, or socio-technical phenomenon, and offer empirical grounding for a novel theoretical view of connectivity. The proposed sociomaterial theoretical framework identifies four different modes of connectivity that explain how connectivity matters to individuals: As materially experienced and enacted in specific sociomaterial practices. As a novel and refined view of connectivity the sociomaterial framework is important for future research on connectivity in the networked society.Dubravka Cecez-Kecmanovic, Sebastian Boell and John Campbell
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Source
Collaborative IT Outsourcing in the Public Sector: A Case Analysis of Standard Business Reporting in Australia
Type
Conference paper
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Access Statement
Open Access