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Technology and Institutions: What Can Research on Information
Technology and Research on Organizations Learn from Each Other?
Wanda J. Orlikowski and Stephen R. Barley
Volume 25, Issue 2
Abstract
We argue that because of important epistemological differences between
the fields of information technology and organization studies, much
can be gained from greater interaction between them. In particular, we
argue that information technology research can benefit from incorporating
institutional analysis from organization studies, while organization studies
can benefit even more by following the lead of information technology research
in taking the material properties of technologies into account. We further
suggest that the transformations currently occurring in the nature of work
and organizing cannot be understood without considering both the technological
changes and the institutional contexts that are reshaping economic and
organizational activity. Thus, greater interaction between the fields
of information technology and organization studies should be viewed as
more than a matter of enrichment. In the intellectual engagement
of these two fields lies the potential for an important fusion of perspectives,
a fusion more carefully attuned to explaining the nature and consequences
of the techno-social phenomena that increasingly pervade our lives.
Keywords:
Epistemology, institutional analysis, information technology, organization
studies, research agenda, technological change
ISRL Categories:
AE, AI08, D01, BD02, DA03, DD01, IB
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