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Studying Knowledge Management in Information Systems
Research: Discourses and Theoretical Assumptions
Ulrike Schultze and Dorothy E. Leidner
Volume 26, Issue 3
Abstract
In information systems, most research on knowledge management assumes
that knowledge has positive implications for organizations. However,
knowledge is a double-edged sword: while too little might result in expensive
mistakes, too much might result in unwanted accountability. The purpose
of this paper is to highlight the lack of attention paid to the unintended
consequences of managing organizational knowledge and thereby to broaden
the scope of IS-based knowledge management research. To this end, this
paper analyzes the IS literature on knowledge management. Research
articles published between 1990 and 2000 in six IS journals are classified
into one of four scientific discourses developed by Deetz (1996). These
discourses are the normative, the interpretive, the critical, and the dialogic.
For each of these discourses, we identify the research focus, the metaphors
of knowledge, the theoretical foundations, and the implications apparent
in the articles representing it. The metaphors of knowledge that
emerge from this analysis are knowledge as object, asset, mind, commodity,
and discipline. Furthermore, we present a paper that is exemplary
of each discourse. Our objective with this analysis is to raise IS
researchers’ awareness of the potential and the implications of the different
discourses in the study of knowledge and knowledge management.
Keywords:
Epistemology, knowledge, knowledge management
ISRL Categories: IB02,
AL01, AJ
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