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Call for Participation: Data & Society Workshop on Tech & Orgs, 6/14

  • 1.  Call for Participation: Data & Society Workshop on Tech & Orgs, 6/14

    Posted 03-25-2019 09:16
    Dear Colleagues (with apologies for cross-posting),

    I'm very happy to share that the Data & Society Research Institute in NYC seeks applications for an upcoming one-day workshop on the integration of technology into organizations. 

    Please do share with your networks far and wide, and don't hesitate to reach out with any questions!

    Call for Workshop Participation
    Algorithms on the Shop Floor: Data-driven Technologies in Organizational Context

    Deadline for applications: April 19, 2019
    Workshop date: June 14, 2019 in NYC at Data & Society
    Application link: http://datasociety.net/algorithms-on-the-shop-floor
    For questions, email events@datasociety.net

    On June 14, 2019, Data & Society will host a workshop in NYC on the
    intersection of technology and organizational theory and practice. The
    workshop arises from an increasing need to understand how automated,
    algorithmic, AI, or otherwise data-driven technologies are being
    integrated into organizational contexts and processes.

    The workshop will convene researchers who study how new technologies
    are introduced, incorporated, resisted or maintained within organized
    groups, and the changes this integration brings. Such changes might
    include processes (workflows, tasks, "re-skilling," "changed" skills,
    augmentation) or in structures (roles, jurisdictions, authority), or
    other key sociological issues (such as power, culture, diversity,
    expertise, risk, rationality, legitimacy, and solidarity). In a world
    where new technologies are being integrated into organizations of all
    sizes and types, how can we make sense of what gets lost, what gets
    gained, and what gets changed? Many of these questions are long
    standing themes in organizational studies and ethnographies examining
    the social complexities of working on the machine shop floor, to which
    the title of our workshop alludes. Still, how do such integrations
    provoke new shifts in power relations and social values?

    The range of field sites and research questions appropriate for this
    event is wide. The only requirements for participation are that: 1)
    you must be a researcher (with or without an academic affiliation); 2)
    your research questions must address a dimension of socio-technical
    practice in the context of a formalized organization.

    Relevant topics for this workshop might include:

    How do formations of power, hierarchy, and discretionary
    decision-making change when automated and AI technologies are
    introduced?
    How are issues of diversity and equity brought into and reconstituted
    when new technologies are introduced?
    How does the integration of new technologies into organizations
    intersect with issues of access, inclusion, and disability?
    What are sites of unintended use, resistance, or deviance with respect
    to technology in organizations?
    How are new forms of expertise, skill, and training emerging to meet
    demands of using new technologies in the workplace?
    How are new or existing labor organizations confronting the perceived
    threat of AI?
    What are organizational formations or organizational processes that
    build on digital technologies to advance equity and social justice?
    What lessons does the history of organizational theory and practice
    hold for contemporary dynamics?
    How are bureaucratic forms of control (such as auditing or impact
    policy) integrated into the development of technology?

    These examples are by no means exhaustive, but intended to provide a
    flavor of the kind of relevant research questions. We are especially
    interested in strange outliers and unexpected studies.

    Key Dates
    * Application Deadline: April 19, 2019
    * Selection Decisions: May 1, 2019
    * Full Paper Deadline: May 28, 2019
    * Workshop: June 14, 2019

    Participation Requirements
    The structure of the Data & Society Workshop series is designed to
    maximize scholarly thinking about the evolving and societally
    important issues surrounding data-driven technologies. Participants
    will be asked to read three full papers in advance of the event and
    prepare comments for intensive discussion. Some participants will be
    asked to be discussants of papers, where they will lead the
    conversation and engage the room. Authors will not present their work,
    but rather participate in critical discussion with the assembled group
    about the paper, with explicit intent of making the work stronger and
    more interdisciplinary.

    All participants are required to read three papers in advance of the
    event and come ready to offer constructively critical feedback. We
    want researchers to constructively spar with and challenge one another
    to strengthen ourselves across the board. This is not an event for
    passive attendance, but an opportunity to engage each other
    substantively.

    This event is first and foremost an opportunity to collectively think
    and help construct a field. Although this event is designed to bring
    together 30-40 researchers, only 12 papers will be workshopped. Yet,
    everyone who attends is expected to be an active participant and
    contribute to rich conversations. We believe that it is through active
    engagement with other scholars around research that new insights can
    emerge. In other words, this event is designed to be the kind of
    intense intellectual engagement that made you fall in love with being
    a researcher in the first place.
    Format

    The day will be organized into three time slots, each 75 minutes long.
    One paper will be workshopped in each session. Multiple sessions will
    run in parallel so there will be a total of ~12 papers, but each
    participant will only be responsible for reading and engaging with 3.
    Within each group, a discussant will open with a critique of the paper
    before inviting participants to share their feedback. (If you
    participate in this event, you may be asked to be a discussant on one
    paper.) All are expected to share feedback, with author response
    towards the end of the session.

    Logistics

    The event will take place on June 14, 2019, and will run from 8:45am
    to 6pm. Paper sessions will run until 4:15pm; afterwards, there will
    be a reception for all participants.
    All meals will be covered during the event. Unfortunately, we have
    limited funding to support travel for this workshop; however, we're
    happy to provide a formal invitation for participation/"speaking" to
    anyone who may need it to secure their own funding.
    Application Process (Deadline: April 19)

    For this event, we are looking to bring together researchers from
    diverse disciplines studying technology in organizations. This can
    include management, organization studies, communications, information
    studies, computer-supported cooperative work, computer-human
    interaction, science and technology studies, ethics, labor, law,
    policy, anthropology, and design research. As a result, attendees
    should expect to engage with scholars who are outside of their field
    of study. We ask that attendees think of the Data & Society Workshop
    series as an opportunity to engage with a broader cross-disciplinary
    field, and to strengthen both relationships and research through
    participation in the workshop.

    Because the paper submission date is only a few weeks after the
    application deadline, you should only apply as an author if you have a
    paper that you're actively writing right now and will be ready to
    share a draft with others by May 28, 2019. If you aren't already
    working on this paper, you probably aren't in a good position to
    workshop it at this event. Appropriate papers may be a
    work-in-progress book chapter or a journal article. (Full-length books
    are a bit too much for this event, so if you're writing a book, think
    about the chapter that you most want to get feedback on.)

    To apply as an author, please submit the following:
    * Name, affiliation, title, email address, discipline.
    * Big research question you're seeking to answer with your research.
    * Paper title + 100-250 word abstract.
    * The current half-baked, thick-outline, total mess of the paper.**
    ** We are asking for the disaster of a paper to understand where you
    are with the piece now, and the arguments you intend to make, so that
    we can appropriately match you to a discussant. We won't share this
    version with anyone (we promise).
    Please note: All co-authors for papers must apply separately. If your
    co-author doesn't apply, we will assume that s/he is not interested in
    attending the workshop. It will be hard to add additional participants
    later, so make sure your co-authors apply if they want to attend.

    To apply as a participant/discussant, please submit the following:
    * Name, affiliation, title, email address, discipline.
    * Big research question you're seeking to answer with your research.
    * 100-250 word description of your research.

    Application link: http://datasociety.net/algorithms-on-the-shop-floor
    For questions, email events@datasociety.net