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Phenomenological perspectives in IS: lessons learnt from Claudio Cibbora.

Bednar, Peter LU and Welch, Christine (2006) ItAIS2006: 3rd Conference of Italian Chapter of the Association for Information Systems: Information Systems and People: Implementing Information Technology in the Workplace p.1-17
Abstract
In the course of his life’s work, Claudio Ciborra addressed many interesting and complex problem areas of information systems, from management of corporate information infrastructures to organizational learning. However, a unifying theme which permeated his work was an emphasis on recognizing ‘users’ as real human beings, not idealised types. He considered people, leading real, every-day lives; not lived according to a plan, but through processes of sense making and muddling through, influenced by emotions. He pointed out that dependence on established methodologies, tools, and techniques could blind developers to human problems and issues, and he highlighted the inadequacy of attempts to address both social and technical domains within... (More)
In the course of his life’s work, Claudio Ciborra addressed many interesting and complex problem areas of information systems, from management of corporate information infrastructures to organizational learning. However, a unifying theme which permeated his work was an emphasis on recognizing ‘users’ as real human beings, not idealised types. He considered people, leading real, every-day lives; not lived according to a plan, but through processes of sense making and muddling through, influenced by emotions. He pointed out that dependence on established methodologies, tools, and techniques could blind developers to human problems and issues, and he highlighted the inadequacy of attempts to address both social and technical domains within the same approach. Primarily because of his focus on real people, the authors of this paper have often turned to Ciborra’s work, not only as a source of authority, but, more subtly, as an inspiration to develop our own thinking about the human beings at the heart of any problem space we may consider.



In this paper, the authors wish to develop thinking with a focus on systems as emergent properties of individuals interacting within group situations. Like Claudio Ciborra, we aspire to include active application of philosophical perspectives in our analytical inquiries, and not merely to use them as frameworks to explore and illuminate underlying assumptions or conclusions. Ciborra was one of the researchers in whose work we could recognize efforts to escape shackles represented by interpretations of socio-technical thinking. We attempt to address a similar challenge by highlighting relevant systems analysis. Our purpose is to focus on individual uniqueness as a key to exploring organizational uniqueness and practice. In this paper we offer a taxonomy of information systems analysis, illustrating a distinction between approaches attempting to apply philosophy in their use of methods, and not only in the development of methods for use. (Less)
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author
and
publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Information Systems Analysis, Contextual Inquiry, Contextual Analysis, Phenomenology, Complex Analysis
host publication
[Host publication title missing]
editor
D'Atri, Alessandro
pages
17 pages
publisher
CERSI: Rome / ItAIS
conference name
ItAIS2006: 3rd Conference of Italian Chapter of the Association for Information Systems: Information Systems and People: Implementing Information Technology in the Workplace
conference location
Milan:, Italy
conference dates
2006-10-26 - 2006-10-27
language
English
LU publication?
no
id
8c31da2e-7548-42b8-9ec4-9ff8035b98de (old id 1484943)
date added to LUP
2016-04-04 10:01:10
date last changed
2018-11-21 20:56:15
@inproceedings{8c31da2e-7548-42b8-9ec4-9ff8035b98de,
  abstract     = {{In the course of his life’s work, Claudio Ciborra addressed many interesting and complex problem areas of information systems, from management of corporate information infrastructures to organizational learning. However, a unifying theme which permeated his work was an emphasis on recognizing ‘users’ as real human beings, not idealised types. He considered people, leading real, every-day lives; not lived according to a plan, but through processes of sense making and muddling through, influenced by emotions. He pointed out that dependence on established methodologies, tools, and techniques could blind developers to human problems and issues, and he highlighted the inadequacy of attempts to address both social and technical domains within the same approach. Primarily because of his focus on real people, the authors of this paper have often turned to Ciborra’s work, not only as a source of authority, but, more subtly, as an inspiration to develop our own thinking about the human beings at the heart of any problem space we may consider. <br/><br>
<br/><br>
In this paper, the authors wish to develop thinking with a focus on systems as emergent properties of individuals interacting within group situations. Like Claudio Ciborra, we aspire to include active application of philosophical perspectives in our analytical inquiries, and not merely to use them as frameworks to explore and illuminate underlying assumptions or conclusions. Ciborra was one of the researchers in whose work we could recognize efforts to escape shackles represented by interpretations of socio-technical thinking. We attempt to address a similar challenge by highlighting relevant systems analysis. Our purpose is to focus on individual uniqueness as a key to exploring organizational uniqueness and practice. In this paper we offer a taxonomy of information systems analysis, illustrating a distinction between approaches attempting to apply philosophy in their use of methods, and not only in the development of methods for use.}},
  author       = {{Bednar, Peter and Welch, Christine}},
  booktitle    = {{[Host publication title missing]}},
  editor       = {{D'Atri, Alessandro}},
  keywords     = {{Information Systems Analysis; Contextual Inquiry; Contextual Analysis; Phenomenology; Complex Analysis}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{1--17}},
  publisher    = {{CERSI: Rome / ItAIS}},
  title        = {{Phenomenological perspectives in IS: lessons learnt from Claudio Cibbora.}},
  year         = {{2006}},
}