Phenomenology, Information Technology and Management
An International Workshop
The London School of Economics, London, UK
10th and 11th of May 2002
Call for Papers and
Participation
As many researchers struggle to give an account of everyday phenomena in
organisations, which resonates with lived experience, there is
increasingly a turn to phenomenology as a way to get back to the
actuality of the ‘everyday life of organisations themselves’. Most
reflective researchers have realised that just more and more empirical
studies are giving us ‘rich’ qualitative accounts but seems to leave us
‘stranded’ in our data. On the other hand elaborate theories seem to be
‘dry, austere and idealistic’ and seem to lack the complexity, vibrancy
and ‘life’ we encounter in the flow of everyday organisational life. We
seem to be trapped between what managers and employees tell us, and what
our theories inform us we should findand never the two shall meet. The
world ‘as such’, the world in the flow of everyday experience, always
seems somehow different. It is exactly in this seemingly impossible
juncture where phenomenology steps in. As Merleau-Ponty claims in his
famous ‘preface’ in Phenomenology of Perception: “Phenomenology is a
study of essences…But phenomenology is also a philosophy which puts
essences back into existence, and does not except to arrive at an
understanding of man and the world from any starting point other than of
their ‘facticity’.” It is this understanding ‘from facticity
itself’ that motivates and steers phenomenologyit is in and through our
always already ‘in the worldness’ that we must seek to describe the
phenomena of organisation, planning, decision-making, innovation, and so
forth. It is with this challenge in mind that the workshop sees its task.
The workshop will aim to develop and explore phenomenological analysis
and accounts of organisational phenomena such as (but not limited
to):
· Information
technology use
· Decision-making,
judgement and intuition
· Innovation and
innovating
· Collaboration
and cooperation
· Strategy and
strategic thought
· Learning and
improvisation
· Organisational
language and languaging
· Organisation
and organising
· Connecting and
being connected
The workshop will be limited to 20-25 participants. We intend it to be an
informal and interactive workshop for immersion and learning. We welcome
contributions from those who have a substantive interest in phenomenology
or who are keen to develop such an interest. The overall aim of the
workshop is to develop and foster the community of phenomenological
researchers in the fields of Information Systems and Management and
Organisational Studies (broadly defined). If you are interested to
participate send an extended abstract or paper to the workshop
chair:
Lucas Introna, Lancaster University
L.introna@lancaster.ac.uk
Closing date: ASAP but not later than 9 April 2002
Notification
of acceptance: 15 April 2002
Programme committee
Lucas Introna, Lancaster, UK
Bogdan Costea, Lancaster, UK
Claudio Ciborra, LSE, UK
Fernando Ilharco, Catholic University, Portugal