Algorithmic Organizing - (Research in the Sociology of Organizations) (Hardcover)
About this item
Highlights
- This volume contains Open Access chapters.
- About the Author: Vern L. Glaser is a Professor of Entrepreneurship and Family Enterprise in the Department of Strategy, Entrepreneurship and Management at the Alberta School of Business, Canada.
- 288 Pages
- Social Science, Sociology
- Series Name: Research in the Sociology of Organizations
Description
About the Book
This volume contains Open Access chapters.
Cutting-edge papers examine the growing phenomenon of algorithmic organizing--the embedding of powerful data-driven tools into organizational structures, routines, and social practices.
Book Synopsis
This volume contains Open Access chapters.
Bringing together cutting-edge papers, this edited volume examines the growing phenomenon of algorithmic organizing--the embedding of powerful data-driven tools into organizational structures, routines, and social practices. These technologies are fundamentally transforming organizational landscapes, raising a critical question: How are algorithmic systems reshaping work, decision-making, and the broader social order?
Charting a holistic perspective on algorithmic organizing, this volume draws on multimodal inquiry and "data work", examining both the technical and sociopolitical dimensions of how organizations adopt, adapt to, and govern algorithmic tools in practice. From data scientists' improvisational craftwork and organizational readiness for algorithmic deployments, to user encounters with opaque platform logics and extreme humanitarian settings, the papers collectively illuminate how algorithms become interwoven with human expertise, professional identities, and institutional demands. Several contributions highlight the tensions that arise when algorithmic systems challenge existing norms--such as professional autonomy and regulatory compliance--underscoring the need for continuous negotiation and re-scripting of roles and responsibilities. The studies also reveal new ethical quandaries related to transparency, fairness, and accountability, pointing to complex trade-offs between efficiency gains and potential harms such as worker surveillance or bias amplification.
Deepening our understanding of how algorithmic organizing is enacted and contested across diverse settings, Algorithmic Organizing offers a roadmap for future research that bridges disciplinary boundaries and highlights the social, technical, and ethical ramifications of an increasingly data-driven world.
About the Author
Vern L. Glaser is a Professor of Entrepreneurship and Family Enterprise in the Department of Strategy, Entrepreneurship and Management at the Alberta School of Business, Canada.
Christine Moser is an Associate Professor of Organization Theory at the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam.
Deborah A. Anderson is an Assistant Professor in Strategic Management in the Honors College of the University of Alabama, USA.
P. Devereaux Jennings is a Professor of Strategy, Entrepreneurship and Management at the Alberta School of Business, Canada.