Representing Organization
Knowledge, Management, and the Information Age
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- USD 59.99
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- USD 59.99
Descripción editorial
This book is an attempt to bridge the gap between the abstractions of current theories of organization and the somewhat excessively grounded material that forms the bulk of literatures within the information systems and knowledge management communities. It provides a theoretically informed analysis of the organizational impact of information technologies by examining and commenting upon the myriad ways in which various actors, organizations, and environments are represented through these technologies. It deploys a number of different theoretical lenses (including systems theory, social constructivism, labour process theory, post-structuralism, and actor network theory) that offer complementary and contrasting insights into the computerization of (managerial) work and its administration, and uses these theories to consider real examples of the development and implementation of knowledge and information systems.