2013
DOI: 10.1007/s11186-013-9195-y
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Governing social practice

Abstract: This paper claims that technology and institutions both epitomize the construction of artificial orders through which a primary reality is shaped to something other than it is by logical operations that share essential affinities. Drawing on this, we work our way to showing how technology operates as governing regime and how tasks and operations that are carried out by the human enactment of expert rules and procedures can considerably be embodied onto technological sequences with which human experts have limi… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
2
1
1

Citation Types

0
19
0
2

Year Published

2015
2015
2021
2021

Publication Types

Select...
7
1
1

Relationship

2
7

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 39 publications
(21 citation statements)
references
References 63 publications
0
19
0
2
Order By: Relevance
“…The data thus procured are variously deployed to sustain online sociality and to trade the outcome of user engagement (more data) to advertisers, data analytics companies and other platform stakeholders. Our aim is to produce a portrait of social media that contemplates the technological underpinnings of these platforms and links technology to institutions (Kallinikos, Hasselbladh and Marton 2013). Social media platforms, we claim, are ultimately data-based organizations that extract value and make profit from the social everyday they themselves engineer.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The data thus procured are variously deployed to sustain online sociality and to trade the outcome of user engagement (more data) to advertisers, data analytics companies and other platform stakeholders. Our aim is to produce a portrait of social media that contemplates the technological underpinnings of these platforms and links technology to institutions (Kallinikos, Hasselbladh and Marton 2013). Social media platforms, we claim, are ultimately data-based organizations that extract value and make profit from the social everyday they themselves engineer.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Voros, 2003). Studies on libraries' ability to meet the requirements of the future society have warned that the traditional approaches to strategy and management may become disconnected from the rapid societal and technical change (Batt, 2015;Kallinikos, Hasselbladh, & Marton, 2013). The concepts of time can help managers to better frame and make sense of organisational change (Wiebe, 2011).…”
Section: Temporal Perspective: Evaluation For the Futurementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some have argued that technologies structure social relationships within organizations and therefore complement, and occasionally compete with institutional modes of governance [60]. For instance, disciplinary power acts in a largely unobtrusive manner as it regulates movements and establishes calculated distributions [58].…”
Section: Extreme Disciplining Of Time and Spacementioning
confidence: 99%