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A Multilevel Model of Resistance to
Information
Technology Implementation
Liette Lapointe and Suzanne
Rivard
Volume 29, Issue 3
Abstract
To
better explain resistance to information technology implementation, we
used a multilevel, longitudinal approach. We first assessed extant
models of
resistance to IT. Using semantic analysis, we
identified five basic components of resistance: behaviors,
object, subject,
threats, and initial conditions. We further examined extant models to
(1) carry
out a preliminary specification of the nature of the relationships
between
these components and (2) refine our understanding of the multilevel
nature of
the phenomenon. Using analytic induction, we examined data from three
case
studies of clinical information systems implementations in hospital
settings,
focusing on physicians’ resistance behaviors. The resulting
mixed-determinants
model
suggests that group resistance behaviors vary during implementation.
When a
system is introduced, users in a group will first assess it in terms of
the
interplay between its features and individual and/or
organizational-level
initial conditions. They then make
projections about the consequences of its use. If expected consequences
are
threatening, resistance behaviors will result. During implementation,
should some trigger occur to either modify or activate an
initial
condition involving the balance of power between the group and other
user
groups, it will also modify the object of resistance, from system to
system
significance. If the relevant initial conditions pertain to the power
of the
resisting group vis-à-vis the system advocates, the object of
resistance will
also be modified, from system significance to system advocates.
Resistance
behaviors will follow if threats are perceived from the interaction
between the
object of resistance and initial conditions. We also found that the
bottom-up process by which group resistance behaviors
emerge from individual behaviors is not the same in early versus late
implementation. In early implementation, the emergence process is one
of
compilation, described as a combination of independent, individual
behaviors.
In later stages of implementation, if group level initial conditions
have
become active, the emergence process is one of composition, described
as the
convergence of individual behaviors.
Keywords: User
resistance, information technology implementation, information
system implementation, longitudinal perspective, multilevel approach,
resistance
behaviors, semantic analysis, case study
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