Multiview—an exploration in information systems development
Australian Computer Journal - Special Issue on Information Systems
Managerial expert systems and organizational change: some critical research issues
Critical issues in information systems research
Defining the boundaries of computing across complex organizations
Critical issues in information systems research
Rethinking Management Information Systems: An Interdisciplinary Perspective
Rethinking Management Information Systems: An Interdisciplinary Perspective
Mobilizing the Information Society: Strategies for Growth and Opportunity
Mobilizing the Information Society: Strategies for Growth and Opportunity
European Journal of Information Systems
Ciborra disclosed: aletheia in the life and scholarship of Claudio Ciborra
European Journal of Information Systems - Special issue: Personal reflections on Claudio Ciborra's life and work
The obituary as bricolage: the Mann Gulch disaster and the problem of heroic rationality
European Journal of Information Systems - Special issue: Personal reflections on Claudio Ciborra's life and work
Advancing Knowledge and the Knowledge Economy
Advancing Knowledge and the Knowledge Economy
Digital Era Governance: IT Corporations, the State, and e-Government
Digital Era Governance: IT Corporations, the State, and e-Government
Kling and the “critical”: Social informatics and critical informatics: Research Articles
Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology
The sociological turn in information science
Journal of Information Science
What Is Social Informatics and Why Does It Matter?
The Information Society
Peers and Spheres of Influence: Situating Rob Kling
The Information Society
From Findings to Theories: Institutionalizing Social Informatics
The Information Society
Reflections on the Academic Policy Analysis Process and the UK Identity Cards Scheme
The Information Society
The Information Society
Hi-index | 0.00 |
This paper explores the connections between two historical lines of research: social informatics in the United States, and sociotechnical studies in the United Kingdom. The author discusses samples of work from three long established UK research sites, at Manchester, Edinburgh and the London School of Economics, to give the reader a sense of sociotechnical work at different historical periods. Though the US and UK traditions share a common interest in the production of technology, and work with complementary concepts and methods, formal links between the two have not been strong for much of the historical period under review. However, there are signs of fusion in the work of a current generation of researchers on both sides of the Atlantic.