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[ecrea] CfP: Materiality of Information, Documents and Work
Wed Apr 01 23:29:52 GMT 2015
CALL FOR PAPERS
Forty-Ninth Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences
(HICSS-49)
*
*Materiality of Information, Documents and Work*
*
January 5-8, 2016 Grand Hyatt Kauai, Hawaii
We invite papers for the third annual HICSS minitrack on the
Materiality of Information. This minitrack serves as a venue to
develop theoretical and methodological approaches for the
investigation of materiality stemming from the field of information
studies. Scholars of Science and Technology Studies (STS) have
readily reformulated their work in terms of materiality (e.g.,
Latour, 1990; Barad 2007), however information studies and IS
scholars have only begun to do the same (e.g., Orlikowski & Scott,
2008; Leonardi, Nardi, Kallinikos 2012).
The last two years of this minitrack have established a unique
concern with re- specifying approaches to information that have
treated it as an abstraction. This early work has moved away from an
examination of data shared with the click of a button, computation
occurring in the cloud', or bots and algorithms operating as
immaterial software or mathematics (e.g., Geiger and Ribes 2011;
Finn et al 2014; Steinhardt & Jackson 2014; Meyer et al 2015).
Instead, they have explored how clouds and computation act as
concrete systems, managed and maintained by 'invisible' workers and
located in real world organizations and even political jurisdictions
(Blanchette 2011); how bots and algorithms do practical work, and
get created by real people with intentions, interests, technical
expertise and limitations (Geiger and Ribes 2011; Rosner 2012,
2014); and how data production, sharing and preservation too are
practical, ongoing and evolving activities, also enacted by
subtended workers, and never just resolved by the latest data
solution (Ribes 2014).
Materiality of information scholars have also begun to 'rediscover'
the threads of material thinking long incipient in information
scholarship: e.g., approaching documents and documenting as practice
and routine (Bjørn and Østerlund 2014; Østerlund 2008), being
mindful that archives are in places and that those places have
consequences for the archives (Bowker 2006), that we have long
talked about records as antelopes (Buchland 1997; Briet 2006; Lund
2009; Frohman 2004), and recalling that interfaces are on objects
like photocopiers (Suchman 2007) and teapots (Norman 2002).
As increasingly complex information systems are adopted across
organizational environments, there is pressing need for more careful
study of the materiality of information systems and practices in
these contexts. Taken together the emergence of new theoretical
formulations and long standing traditions within information
scholarship we are beginning to see the outlines of an approach to
materiality that is unique to studies of information. This minitrack
seeks to foster and advance this discussion, and to continue a
productive dialogue with interventionist approaches as well as
allied fields such as STS, Media Studies, and Organizational
Studies. We welcome papers conducting empirical research,
theoretical development and synthesis on topics such as (but not
limited to): Trace data methodologies, infrastructures of breakdown,
documenting work, material interventions, maintenance and repair,
classification systems and big data, standards, and sociomaterial
analysis.
The minitrack chairs welcome inquires from authors about the
suitability of their work for the minitrack. Contact Co-chairs
Carsten Østerlund, Syracuse University, (costerlu /at/ syr.edu)
<mailto:(costerlu /at/ syr.edu)>, http://carsten.syr.edu; David Ribes,
Georgetown University (dr273 /at/ georgetown.edu)
<mailto:(dr273 /at/ georgetown.edu)>, http://www.davidribes.com; or Daniela
K. Rosner, University of Washington, (dkrosner /at/ uw.edu)
<mailto:(dkrosner /at/ uw.edu)>, http://www.danielarosner.com.
IMPORTANT DEADLINES
From now to June 1: If you wish, you may prepare an abstract and
contact the minitrack chairs for guidance and indication of
appropriate content.
June 15: Authors submit full papers by this date, following the
Author Instructions
(http://www.hicss.hawaii.edu/hicss_43/authorinstruction.htm). Please
consult the HICSS main website for complete information
(http://www.hicss.hawaii.edu). All papers will be submitted in
double column publication format and limited to 10 pages including
diagrams and references. HICSS papers undergo a double-blind review
(June15August15).
August 15: Acceptance notices are sent to Authors. At this time, at
least one author of an accepted paper should begin visa, fiscal and
travel arrangements to attend the conference to present the paper.
September 15: Authors submit Final Version of papers following
submission instructions posted on the HICSS web site. At least one
author of each paper must register by this date with specific plans
to attend the conference.
October 15: Papers without at least one registered author to attend
HICSS will be pulled from the publication process; authors will be
notified.
References:
Barad, K. 2007. Meeting the Universe Halfway: Quantum Physics and
the Entanglement of Matter and Meaning, (Duke University Press:
Durham, NC.
Berg, M. Bowker, G. (1996). The multiple bodies of the medical
record: Toward a Sociology of an Artifact. The Sociological
Quarterly, 38 (3): 513-537.
Bjørn, P., Østerlund, C. (2014) Socio-Material Design: Bounding
Technologies in Practice. Switzerland: Springer International
Publishing.
Briet S. 2006 [1951]. What Is Documentation? Transl./ed. RE Day, L
Martinet, HGB Anghelescu. Lanham, MD: Scarecrow
Blanchette JF (2011) A material history of bits. Journal of the
American Society for Information Science and Technology 62(6):
1042-1057.
Bowker GC (2006) Memory Practices in the Sciences. Cambridge, MA:
MIT Press.
Buckland MK. 1997. What is a document? J. Am. Soc. Inform. Sci.
48:8049
Finn, M., and J. Srinivasan, and R. Veeraraghavan. (2014) "Seeing
with Paper: Government Documents and Material Participation." Paper
presented at the The 47th Annual Hawaii International Conference on
System Science (HICSS-48), Hawaii, HI.
Frohman, Bernd. (2004). Deflating information: From Science studies
to documentation. Toronto, Canada: University of Toronto Press.
Geiger, R. S. and D. Ribes (2011). Trace ethnography: Following
coordination through documentary practices. Hawaii International
Conference on System Sciences (HICSS), IEEE.
Latour, B. 1990. "Visualisation and Cognition: Drawing Things
Together." in Representation in Scientific Practice, edited by M.
Lynch and S. Woolgar. Cambridge: MIT Press.
Leonardi, B. A. Nardi, and J. Kallinikos, (2012). Materiality and
Organizing: Social Interaction in a Technological World. Oxford, UK:
Oxford University Press.
Lund, N. W. (2009). Document Theory. Annual Review of Information
Science and Technology, 43, 399-432.
Norman, D. (2002). Emotion & design: attractive things work better.
interactions, 9(4), 36-42.
Mazmanian, M. Cohen, M. and Dourish, P. Dynamic Reconfiguration in
Planetary Exploration: A Sociomaterial Ethnography, MISQ., vol. 38,
no. 3, pp. 831848, 2014.
Meyer, S.R., Pierce, C.S., Kou, Y., Leonardi, P.M., Nardi, B.A.,
Bailey, D.E. (2015) Offshoring Digital Work, But Not Physical
Output: Examining Differential Access to Task Objects in Globally
Distributed Automotive Engineering and Graphic Design Work. The 48th
Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Science (HICSS-48),
Hawaii, HI
Orlikowski, W. J., and Scott, S. V. 2008. "Sociomateriality:
Challenging the Separation of Technology, Work and Organization,"
The Academy of Management Annals (2:1), pp 433-474.
Østerlund, C. "The Materiality of Communicative Practices: The
boundaries and objects of an emergency room genre," Scandinavian
Journal of Information Systems (20s:1) 2008, pp 7-40.
Østerlund, C., & Boland, D. 2009. Document Cycles: Knowledge Flows
in Heterogeneous Healthcare Information System Environments. Paper
presented at the The 42nd Annual Hawaii International Conference on
System Science (HICSS-42), Hawaii, HI.
Ribes, D. (2014). The Kernel of a Research Infrastructure. Computer
Supported Cooperative Work (CSCW), ACM: 574-587.
Rosner, D. K., and M. G. Ames. (2014) Designing for Repair?
Infrastructures and Materialities of Breakdown. Computer Supported
Cooperative Work (CSCW). ACM, 2014.
Rosner, D. K. "The material practices of collaboration." Computer
Supported Cooperative Work (CSCW). ACM, 2012:1155-1164.
Steinhardt, SB and Jackson SJ (2014) Material Engagements: Putting
Plans and Things Together in Collaborative Ocean Science. Paper
presented at the The 47th Annual Hawaii International Conference on
System Science (HICSS-48), Hawaii, HI.
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