mardi 3 janvier 2012

MIT Press : Connecting Democracy

Connecting Democracy
Online Consultation and the Flow of Political Communication
Edited by Stephen Coleman and Peter M. Shane

http://mitpress.mit.edu/catalog/item/default.asp?ttype=2&tid=12680

Social media hive mind & attitude formation (Jeremy Blackman)

Jeremy, a provocative starting point on this might be Jaron Lanier's Digital Maoism paper which stimulated significant discussion across the web - available at http://edge.org/3rd_culture/lanier06/lanier06_index.html

Conference "Critique, Democracy, and Philosophy in 21st Century Information Society"

Plenary Talk Abstracts of the Conference "Critique, Democracy, and Philosophy in 21st Century Information Society" (Uppsala, 2-4 May 2012)

International Journal of Internet Science

A peer reviewed open access journal for empirical findings, methodology, and theory of social and behavioral science concerning the Internet and its implications for individuals, social groups, organizations, and society.



Fast Capitalism

journal devoted to analyzing the impact of information and communication technologies on self, society and culture in the 21st century. bridges the social sciences and the humanities. welcomes disciplinary and interdisciplinary work.

samedi 5 novembre 2011

Social'Privacy'in'Networked'Publics: Teens’'Attitudes,'Practices,'and'Strategies

This is an is an unfinished work-in-progress article, complete with all sorts of bugs that we will need to address before we submit it for publication

By danah! oyd and Alice Marwick
Microsoft!Research

http://www.danah.org/papers/2011/SocialPrivacyPLSC-Draft.pdf

jeudi 28 octobre 2010

Wilensky on Organizational Intelligence

Have finally got hold of a library copy of the original book on Organizational Intelligence by Harold Wilensky, published in 1967. Some of Wilensky's assumptions look a little dated now, but there's a wealth of great ideas and examples.



One of the problems talking about intelligence is that people may use the word to refer to a number of different concepts.
  • Signals and their content - intelligence as raw material for sense-making and decision making
  • Expertise - intelligence as the individual and collective ability to reason efficiently about significant questions - Wilensky discusses several different types of expertise, which may be mobilized in an intelligent organization
  • Function - a set of processes for acquiring and deploying intelligence as required across the organization, typically operated by a specialist organization unit
  • Strategic capability - intelligence as a property of an organization, enabling it to operate effectively in volatile environments
Wilensky himself defines intelligence as "information - questions, insights, hypotheses, evidence - relevant to policy" (p viii), and mostly uses the word to refer to the content rather than the process or capability. But the book is largely about the intelligence function, and how this function is supported by relevant skills, capabilities, doctrines and organizational structures.

Value of intelligence

In Chapter Two, Wilensky argues that an intelligence function has particular value and relevance for large organizations in complex environments. He identifies three key specialist roles, contributing to his notion of organizational intelligence, and identifies three factors creating particular need for these three roles.

Contact men, responsible for liaison and communication with the external environment, This role is similar to the "Resource Investigator" team role identified by Belbin.Especially needed when an organization is in conflict with its social environment or depends on it for the achievement of its central goals (p10).
Internal communications specialist, responsible for liaison and coordination inside the organization.Especially needed when an organization depends on the unity and support of persons, groups, factions or parties within its membership for the achievement of its central goals (p13).
Facts and figures men. These are responsible for building and deploying analytic models and methods. More recently known as quants or wonks.Especially needed when an organization sees its external environment and internal operations as rationalized - that is, as subject to discernible, predictable uniformities in relationships among significant objects (p14).

Wilensky's argument now looks dated, not only because of his assumption that these roles would be filled by men, but also because of his trust in rational and predictable analytical models, which would now be seen as unrealistic and simplistic. However, it seems like a good historical starting point for starting to think about a division of labour / expertise within the intelligence function and beyond
Richard Veryard talking about Organizational Intelligence with Matt Deacon
http://demandingchange.blogspot.com/2010/04/wilensky-on-organizational-intelligence.html