MISQ Archivist
Power, Rationality, and the Art of Living
Through Socio-Technical Change
Chrisanthi Avgerou and Kathy McGrath
Abstract
Most information systems research takes for granted the
assumption that IS practice and associated organizational change can
be effectively understood as a process of technical reasoning and
acting governed by a mix of concerns about software construction,
administrative control, and economic gain. Its mission has been to
empower managers, IS engineers, and information and communication
technology users with knowledge and techniques for effective
decision making. However, empirical research frequently encounters
human activity that is at odds with the assumed pattern of rational
behavior. Recent work tries to explain behavior in IS and
organizational change in terms of social processes rather than as a
consideration of rational techniques of professional practice. In
this paper, this ambivalence is addressed within the IS field with
regard to technical/rational knowledge and practice. We draw from
the theoretical work of Michel Foucault on power/knowledge and the
aesthetics of existence to argue that the rational techniques of IS
practice and the power dynamics of an organization and its social
context are closely intertwined, requiring each other to be
sustained. Furthermore, we develop a context-specific notion of
rationality in IS innovation, through which interested parties judge
the value of an innovation for their lives and consequently support
or subvert its course. We demonstrate these ideas with a case study
of a social security organization in Greece.
Keywords: Rationality, IS innovation, power/knowledge, regime of
truth, aesthetics of existence, techniques of the self