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Andre a. Belliger

    Grenzmanagement
    Anthology
    Wissensmanagement für KMU
    Ritualtheorien
    Organizing networks
    Network publicy governance
    • 2018

      Network publicy governance

      On Privacy and the Informational Self

      • 170 pages
      • 6 hours of reading

      The information age has brought about a growing conflict between proponents of a data-driven society on the one side and demands for protection of individual freedom, autonomy, and dignity by means of privacy on the other. The causes of this conflict are rooted in the modern Western opposition of individual and society and a self-understanding of the human as an autonomous rational subject with an inalienable right to informational self-determination. Andréa Belliger and David J. Krieger propose a theory of information as a common good and redefine the individual as an informational self who exists in networks made up of both humans and nonhumans. Privacy is replaced by publicy and issues of data use and data protection are described in terms of governance instead of government.

      Network publicy governance
    • 2016

      Organizing networks

      An Actor-Network Theory of Organizations

      • 272 pages
      • 10 hours of reading

      What are organizations? Where do they come from? How are they transformed and adapted to new situations? In the digital age and in the global network society, traditional theories of the organization can no longer answer these questions. Based on actor-network theory, this book explains organizations as flexible, open networks in which both human and non-human actors enter into socio-technical assemblies by constantly negotiating and re-negotiating programs of action. Organizations are not macro social structures or autonomous systems operating behind the backs of individuals. Instead, they are scalable actor-networks guided by network norms of connectivity, flow, communication, participation, authenticity, and flexibility.

      Organizing networks