Grint & Woolgar (1997);

Dorothy Smith’s (1990a, b);

 

Giddens, A. The Constitution of Society.

 

Rose' evaluation paper:

http://www.cs.auc.dk/~jeremy/pdf%20files/ECIS1998.pdf

 

Walsham, G. and Han, C.K. (1991). Structuration Theory and Information Systems Research. Journal of Applied Systems Analysis, 17, 77-85.

 

** Barley, S. R. (1986). Technology as an occasion for structuring: Evidence from observations of CT scanners and the social order of radiology departments. Administrative Science Quarterly, 31, 78-108.

 

** Markus, M. L., & Robey, D. (1988). Information technology and organizational change: Causal structure in theory and research. Management Science, 34 (5), 583-598.

 

[from structuration theory-bibiography]

Brooks, L. (1997).  Structuration theory and new technology: Analysing organizationally situated computer-aided design. Info Systems Journal, 7, 133-151.

 

Champion, D. (1999).  Structuration theory and conversation modelling: A possible interpretivist approach to bridging the gap in information system design. In Brooks L. and Kimble C. Information Systems – The Next Generation. Proceedings of the 4th UKAIS Conference. York UK  pp616-623.

 

Fulk, J., Schmitz, J. A., & Schwarz, D. (1992). The dynamics of context-behaviour interactions in computer-mediated communication.  In M. Lea (Ed.), Contexts of computer-mediated communication (pp.7-25).  Harvester Wheatsheaf.

{not specifically structuration but included here because of the section it includes on structuration}

 

Hussain, Z. I., & Flynn, D. J. (1999).  Applying structuration theory within information systems research.  In Brooks L. and Kimble C. Information Systems – The Next Generation.  Proceedings of the 4th UKAIS Conference.  York UK pp624-633.

 

Mandviwalla M (1996). The World View of Collaborative Tools. In D. Day & D. Kovacs (Eds.), Computers,

communication and mental models. Taylor and Francis.

( it looks at what a world view is, different world views & different technology theories and how they affect the view of groupware. Adaptive Structuration theory is used to describe world views & to analyse the effects of world views on users)

 

Scheepers R and Damsgaard J (1997).  Using Internet Technology Within the Organisation: A Structurational Analysis of Intranets.  In Hayne S C and Prinz W, Group ’97, Proceedings of the International ACM SIGGroup Conference on Supporting Group Work.  pp9-18.

 

Shoib G. (1999).  Social construction of an interpretive study of information systems – Reflections on a Case Study.  In Brooks L. and Kimble C. Information Systems – The Next Generation.  Proceedings of the 4th UKAIS Conference. York  UK pp603-615.

 

From J. Rose

 

Clark, J. (1990). Anthony Giddens, Sociology and Modern Social Theory, in: Clark, J., Modgil, C. and Modgil, C. Anthony Giddens, Consensus and Controversy.Basingstoke: Falmer

 

Gregson, N. (1989). On the (ir)relevance of structuration theory to empirical research, in: Held, D. and Thompson, J.B. Social theories of Modern Societies: Anthony Giddens and his Critics. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press

 

Hekman, S. (1990). Hermeneutics and the Crisis of Social Theory: A critique of Giddens' Epistemology, in: Clark, J., Modgil, C. and Modgil, C., Anthony Giddens, Consensus and Controversy. Basingstoke: Falmer

 

Whittington, R. (1992). Putting Giddens into action: social systems and managerial agency. Journal of Management Studies 29(6) 693-712

 

Jones, M. (1997). Structuration and IS, in: Currie, W.L. & Galliers, R.D. Re-Thinking Management Information Systems. Oxford: Oxford University Press

 

** Yates, J. and Orlikowski, W.J. (1992). Genres of organizational communication: a structurational approach to studying communication and media. Academy of Management Review 17(2) 299-326

 

Jones, M. and Nandhakumar, J. (1993). Structured development? A structurational analysis of the development of an executive information system, in: Avison, D.E., Kendall, J.E. and DeGross, J.I. (Ed.) Human, Organizational and Social Dimensions of Information System Development. Amsterdam: North-Holland,

 

Walsham, G. and Sahay, S. (1996). GIS for District-Level Administration in India: Problems and Opportunities, ,

 

** Barley, S.R. and Tolbert, P.S. (1997). Institutionalization and Structuration: studying the links between action and institution, Organization Studies. 18 (1) 93-117.

 

Monteiro, E. and Hanseth, O. (1996). Social Shaping of Information Infrastructure, in: Orlikowski, W.J., Walsham, G., Jones, M. and DeGross, J.I. (Ed.). Information Technology and Changes in Organizational Work. London: Chapman and Hall.

 

Cohen, I.J. (1990). Structuration Theory and Social Order, in: Held, D. and Thompson, J.B. Social theories of Modern Societies: Anthony Giddens and his Critics. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

 

** Cooper, R.B. & Zmud, R.W. (1990). Information technology implementation research: a technological diffusion approach. Management Science, 36(2), February, pp. 123-139.

 

From Or's 2000:

extensive discussions of this technology literature: [no need to check]

 

Marx, L., M. R. Smith, eds. 1994. Does Technology Drive History? MIT Press, Cambridge, MA.

 

Scarbrough, H., J. M. Corbett. 1992. Technology and Organization: Power, Meaning, and Design. Routledge, London, U.K.

 

Scott, W. R. 1990. Technology and structure: An organizational level perspective. P. S. Goodman, L. S. Sproull, Associates. Technology and Organizations. Jossey-Bass, San Francisco, CA. 109–143.

 

a number of structurational models of technology:

 

Poole, M. S., G. DeSanctis. 1990. Understanding the use of group decision support systems: The theory of adaptive structuration. J. Fulk, C. W. Steinfield, eds. Organizations and Communication Technology. Sage, Newbury Park, CA. 173–193.

 

Poole, M. S., G. DeSanctis. 1992. Microlevel structuration in computer-supported group decision making. Human Comm. Res. 19(1) 5–49.

 

Walsham, G. 1993. Interpreting Information Systems in Organizations. John Wiley, New York.

 

Sproull, L. S., P. S. Goodman. 1990. Technology and organizations: Integration and opportunities. P. S. Goodman, L. S. Sproull, and Associates, eds. Technology and Organizations. Jossey-Bass, San Francisco. 254–265.

 

Weick, K. 1990. Technology as equivoque. P. S. Goodman, L. S. Sproull, and Associates, eds.. Technology and Organizations. Jossey-Bass, San Francisco, CA. 1–44.

 

Roberts, K. H., M. Grabowski. 1995. Organizations, technology, and structuring. S. R. Clegg, C. Hardy, W. R. Nord, eds. Handbook of Organization Studies. Sage Publications, Thousand Oaks, CA. 409–423.

 

Woolgar, S., K. Grint. 1991. Computers and the transformation of social analysis. Sci., Tech., & Human Values 16(3) 368–378.

 

Rice, R. E., E. M. Rogers. 1980. Reinvention in the innovation process. Knowledge 1(4) 499–514.

 

Woolgar, S. 1996. Technologies as cultural artefacts. W. Dutton, ed. Information and Communication Technologies: Visions and Realities. Oxford University Press, Oxford, U.K. 87–102.

 

Kling, R. 1992. Audiences, narratives, and human values in social studies of technology. Sci., Tech. and Human Values 17(3) 349–365.

 

Cassell, P., ed. 1993. The Giddens Reader. Stanford University Press, Stanford, CA.

 

Iacono, S., R. Kling. (in press) Computerization movements: The rise of the internet and distant forms of work. J. Yates, J. Van Maanen, eds. IT and Organizational Transformation: History, Rhetoric, and Practice. Sage Publications, Newbury Park, CA.

 

12/27/01

Beath, C. M., W. J. Orlikowski. 1994. The contradictory structure of systems development methodologies: Deconstructing the IS-user relationship in information engineering. Inform. Systems Res. 5(4) 350–377.

 

Robey, D., & S. Sahay. 1996. Transforming work through information technology: A comparative case study of geographic information systems in county government. Inform. Systems Res. 7(1) 93–110.

 

Orlikowski, W. J., & S. R. Barley. 2001. Technology and institution: What can research on information technology and research on organization studies learn from each other. MIS Quart. 25(2).

 

Barley, S. R. (1988), “Technology, Power, and the Social Organization of Work,” in N. DiTomaso (Ed.), Research in the Sociology of Organizations, Greenwich, CT: JAI Press, 33–80.