Unpacking the sociomaterial parameters of connectivity management practices in the Saudi academic context

Njod Aljabr, Dimitra I. Petrakaki, Petros Chamakiotis
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Abstract

PurposeExisting research on how professionals manage after-hours connectivity to work has been dominated by studies on the strategies/practices individuals develop. In these studies, mobile technology is perceived as a tool or an enabler that supports otherwise human-centric connectivity decisions. This view sees technology as separate or external to the organisation, missing out on its nuanced role in shaping connectivity decisions. Our study aims to bring technology back into the sociomaterially imbricated context of connectivity and to unpack its parameters.Design/methodology/approachDrawing on data collected from documents and semi-structured interviews, we adopt the framework of “sociomaterial imbrications” (Leonardi, 2011) to understand the social and material parameters that influence connectivity management practices at two different academic institutions in Saudi Arabia.FindingsThe study identifies a set of social and material parameters (organisational, individual, technological and situational) that imbricate to shape, collectively and not individually, professionals’ connectivity management practices. Connectivity decisions to change practice (such as decisions of where, when or why to connect) or technology (how to connect) are not as distinct as they appear but originate from, and are founded on, imbricated sociomaterial parameters. Our study further suggests that connectivity decisions are shaped by individuals’ perceptions of sociomaterial imbrications, but decisions are not solely idiosyncratic. The context within which connectivity decisions are taken influences the type of decisions made.Originality/valueConnectivity management emerged from sociomaterial imbrications within a context constitutive of four interacting parameters: organisational, technological, situational and individual. Decisions around the “how” and the “what” of connectivity – i.e. the practice of connectivity and its underpinning technology – originate from how people perceive sociomaterial imbrications as enabling or constraining within a context. Individual perceptions account for changes in practice and in technology, but the context they find themselves in is also important. For instance, we show that professionals may perceive a certain technology as affording, but eventually they may use another technology for communications due to social norms.
解读沙特学术界连通性管理实践的社会物质参数
目的 有关专业人员如何管理下班后工作连接的现有研究主要是对个人制定的策略/做法的研究。在这些研究中,移动技术被视为支持以人为本的连接决策的工具或推动力。这种观点将技术视为独立于组织之外的东西,忽略了技术在影响连通性决策中的细微作用。我们的研究旨在将技术带回到社会物质混杂的连通性背景中,并解读其参数。设计/方法/途径我们利用从文件和半结构式访谈中收集到的数据,采用 "社会物质混杂"(Leonardi,2011 年)的框架,来了解影响沙特阿拉伯两个不同学术机构连通性管理实践的社会和物质参数。研究结果这项研究确定了一系列社会和物质参数(组织、个人、技术和情境),这些参数共同而非单独地影响着专业人员的连通性管理实践。改变实践的连通性决策(如决定在何处、何时或为何连通)或技术(如何连通)并不像表面上那样截然不同,而是源于相互交织的社会物质参数,并以这些参数为基础。我们的研究进一步表明,连通性决策是由个人对社会物质混杂性的看法决定的,但决策并不完全是特立独行的。原创性/价值连通性管理是在由组织、技术、情景和个人四个相互影响的参数构成的背景下,从社会物质混杂中产生的。围绕互联互通 "如何做 "和 "做什么"(即互联互通的实践及其基础技术)所做的决策,源于人们如何看待社会物质混合物在环境中的促进或制约作用。个人的看法决定了实践和技术的变化,但他们所处的环境也很重要。例如,我们的研究表明,专业人士可能会认为某种技术能够提供便利,但最终他们可能会因为社会规范而使用另一种技术进行通信。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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