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Title:
Social theory and philosophy for information systems
Publication Information:
Chichester, West Sussex, England ; Hoboken, NJ : J. Wiley, c2004.
Physical Description:
xv, 455 p. ; 24 cm.
ISBN:
9780470851173

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30000010107084 HM851 S65 2004 Open Access Book Book
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30000010081776 HM 851 S65 2004 Open Access Book Book
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Summary

Summary

As Information Systems matures as a discipline, there is a gradual move away from pure statistics towards consideration of alternative approaches and philosophies. This has not been incorporated into the literature of the field. Until now. Collecting major social theorists and philosophers into one volume, Social Theory and Philosophy for Information Systems provides a historical and critical analysis of each that is both authoritative and firmly focused on practical relevance to IS. The result is an insightful text for researchers, academics and students that will provide an up-to-date starting point for those considering alternative approaches.


Author Notes

John Mingers is Professor of OR and Information Systems and Director of Research at Kent Business School, University of Kent, UK. His research interests include the use of systems methodologies in problem situations, particularly the mixing of different methodologies within an intervention (multimethodology); the development of critical realism as a philosophy for information systems; the development of theory concerning the nature of information and meaning; and autopoiesis and its applications. He has published several books, including Self-Producing Systems: Implications and Applications of Autopoiesis and Information Systems: An Emerging Discipline? (with Professor Frank Stowell).

Leslie P. Willcocks is Professor of Information Management at Warwick Business School. He received a doctorate from the University of Cambridge, is visiting professor at Erasmus and Melbourne Universities, and joint Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Information Technology . He is co-author of 23 books and has published over 140 papers in journals ranging from Harvard Business Review to MIS Quarterly, MISQ Executive and Journal of Management Studies . His research interests include organizational issues, politics, outsourcing, implementation, e-business and evaluation.


Table of Contents

List of Contributors
Series Preface
Preface
1 Thinking about Social Theory and Philosophy for Information SystemsAllen S. Lee
2 Fit for Function: Functionalism, Neofunctionalism and Information SystemsM. Lynne Markus
3 Phenomenology, Screens, and the World: A Journey with Husserl and Heidegger into PhenomenologyLucas D. Introna and Fernando M. Ilharco
4 Hermeneutics in Information Systems ResearchMichael D. Myers
5 Adorno: A Critical Theory for IS ResearchStephen K. Probert
6 The Critical Social Theory of J ? urgen Habermas and its Implications for IS ResearchHeinz K. Klein and Minh Q. Huynh
7 Foucault, Power/Knowledge and Information Systems: Reconstructing the PresentLeslie P. Willcocks
8 Structuration Theory and Information Systems: A Critical ReappraisalMatthew Jones and Wanda Orlikowski and Kamal Munir
9 What we May Learn from the Social Shaping of Technology ApproachDebra Howcroft and Nathalie Mitev and Melanie Wilson
10 Re-establishing the Real: Critical Realism and Information SystemsJohn Mingers
11 Complexity and Information SystemsYasmin Merali
Index
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