avhandlingar
Disputation

Disputation i data- och informationsvetenskap: Niki Chatzipanagiotou

Titel: Managers' cooperative work practices in computional artefacts-supported library systems
Ämne: Data- och informationsvetenskap
Fakultet: Fakulteten för teknik
Datum: Onsdagen den 1 september 2021 kl 10.00
Plats: Sal C1202 (Newton), hus C, Växjö
Opponent: Professor Ulrika Lundh Snis, Högskolan Väst
Betygsnämnd: Professor Luigina Ciolfi, University College Cork, Irland
Professor Christina Keller, Lunds universitet
Professor Kari Rönkkö, Högskolan Kristianstad
Ordförande: Docent Päivi Jokela, Institutionen för informatik, Linnéuniversitetet
Huvudhandledare: Professor Anita Mirijamdotter, Institutionen för informatik, Linnéuniversitetet
Biträdande handledare: Docent Jaime Campos, Institutionen för informatik, Linnéuniversitetet
Examinator: Seniorprofessor Christina Mörtberg, Institutionen för informatik, Linnéuniversitetet
Spikning: Fredagen den 18 juni kl 14.00 på universitetsbiblioteket i Växjö

Zoom länken:  https://lnu-se.zoom.us/j/67270065949?pwd=N1ViSFpIamtaS2QybFJCcjNlVVN3dz09

 

Abstract

The dissertation presents understandings of the complex, contextual, cooperative everyday work practices of academic library managers supported by computational artefacts, as well as challenges disrupting their practices and thereby computational artefacts usage. The doctoral research approaches and conceptualises managers’ work as ‘everyday cooperative practice’, in this way adopting the computer-supported cooperative work (CSCW) approach. A focused-ethnographic study explores middle managers’ everyday cooperative work practices in two academic libraries, in Sweden and Australia, when using computational artefacts, including challenges experienced.

The empirical data was collected through participant observations and formal and informal face-to-face interviews, as well as organizational documents review. The thematically analysed empirical material was presented as vignettes to enable complementary contextual visualisation of managers’ practices. A conceptual framework incorporated CSCW main concepts, such as cooperative work, practice, computational artefacts, situated action, articulation work, awareness, and appropriation. Placed within a managerial environment and inspired by management theories such as sensemaking and soft systems thinking, this conceptualisation serves as a reference point to explicate the research findings and achieve the research aim, to advance the understanding of managers’ everyday cooperative work practices using computational artefacts. 

The outcome of this dissertation illustrates the complex, contextualised, multidimensional and often diverse reality of academic library managers’ everyday cooperative work practices using computational artefacts, as well as emergent challenges that have implications for the use of computational artefacts and workplace practices. The interconnectedness of articulation work, awareness and appropriation, which emerged as a research outcome, vividly illustrates the interdependent and interrelated nature of managers’ everyday work. It extends the understanding of everyday cooperative work practices of academic library managers and provides rich analysis of their practical doing of managing and using of computational artefacts. Thus, this doctoral research generates contributions for the informatics field and, particularly, the computer-supported cooperative work (CSCW) research and, modestly, for the management and library domains.