Sociologists can be surprisingly useful in interactive systems design
HCI'92 Proceedings of the conference on People and computers VII
Requirements engineering as the reconciliation of social and technical issues
Requirements engineering
CSCW '94 Proceedings of the 1994 ACM conference on Computer supported cooperative work
Domain-oriented design environments
Proceedings of the 18th international conference on Software engineering
Requirements Engineering: A Good Practice Guide
Requirements Engineering: A Good Practice Guide
Elements of social science engagement in information infrastructure design
dg.o '06 Proceedings of the 2006 international conference on Digital government research
The human infrastructure of cyberinfrastructure
CSCW '06 Proceedings of the 2006 20th anniversary conference on Computer supported cooperative work
Proceedings of the ACM 2009 international conference on Supporting group work
Between meaning and machine: Learning to represent the knowledge of communities
Information and Organization
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
The Dialectical Tensions in the Funding Infrastructure of Cyberinfrastructure
Computer Supported Cooperative Work
Special Theme: Project Management in E-Science: Challenges and Opportunities
Computer Supported Cooperative Work
Quality is a verb: the operationalization of data quality in a citizen science community
Proceedings of the 7th International Symposium on Wikis and Open Collaboration
The Journal of Strategic Information Systems
Between us and them: building connectedness within civic networks
Proceedings of the ACM 2012 conference on Computer Supported Cooperative Work
Ethnography of scaling, or, how to a fit a national research infrastructure in the room
Proceedings of the 17th ACM conference on Computer supported cooperative work & social computing
Capturing quality: retaining provenance for curated volunteer monitoring data
Proceedings of the 17th ACM conference on Computer supported cooperative work & social computing
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This paper traces the use of the concept 'community' by drawing attention to the ways in which it serves as an organizing principle within systems development. The data come from an ethnographic study of participants and their activities in the Water and Environmental Research Systems Network (WATERS). WATERS is a US National Science Foundation-funded observatory and cyberinfrastructure project intended to serve the heterogeneous scientific disciplines studying the water environment. We identify four vehicles by which WATERS participants sought to know the needs, conflicts and goals of their diverse communities: engaging in vernacular discussions; organizing community forums; implementing surveys; and requirements gathering. The paper concludes that the use of community in IT development projects is substantially divorced from its traditional meanings which emphasize collective moral orientations or shared affective ties; instead, within systems development, community has a closer meaning to a 'political constituency,' and is used as a short-hand for issues of inquiry, representation, inclusion and mandate.