Social change and the future of information systems development
Critical issues in information systems research
The in-formation of information systems
Critical issues in information systems research
The sciences of the artificial (3rd ed.)
The sciences of the artificial (3rd ed.)
Managing as Designing
Design science in information systems research
MIS Quarterly
Social design's implications for the IS field
Proceedings of the 2012 iConference
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Simon's The Sciences of the Artificial is rightly influential as a founding text in design research in the information systems field (IS). Simon's contributions in the same volume to what he calls social planning and human design - practices associated with the development of societal scale artifacts that foster a "humane society" - are much less visible in IS design research. I develop and expand on some of Simon's insights here using social design projects such as IT-based civic networks as my context, drawing on a civic network development project called the Urban-net that I have tracked since its inception in 1996. I define some distinctive features of such projects and advance an institutionalist conception of actors (designers) and action. Despite noting that "nothing is more fundamental in setting our research agenda and informing our research methods than our view of the nature of the human beings whose behavior we are studying" (Simon 1985; emphasis added), and despite his recognition that social planning projects often are quite different from other types of technical projects in the demands they make on actors, Simon's (1996) discussion is not moved by a sufficiently nuanced view of the designer. Apropos, and drawing on a sociological institutionalist view of social actors and action, I outline a model of two inter-related design activities: constitutive design - targeting design of the normative or institutional foundation and governance mechanisms - and instrumental design, where designers specify the system to be built within the agreed-upon normative constraints. I conclude with a brief account of the Urban-net case.