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Technology, institutions, and entropy: understanding the critical and creative role of maintenance work

Technology and Organization: Essays in Honour of Joan Woodward

ISBN: 978-1-84950-984-8, eISBN: 978-1-84950-985-5

Publication date: 8 July 2010

Abstract

As we write this chapter, in the autumn of 2008, the US financial sector is in crisis – major investment banks have gone bankrupt, others have lost most of their market value, and the US Congress is considering a bailout of some 700 million US dollars (The Economist, 2008). The situation represents a clear case of the extraordinary potential for breakdown in social systems that depend on complex layers of technology and institutionalized practice – a “logistical nightmare of fixing a market whose complexity is central to the crisis” (The Economist, 2008, p. 81). More generally, we argue that it challenges prevailing images of technology and institutions as stabilizing forces and points to the fundamentally important, but often neglected, work of maintaining technology and institutions.

Citation

Dover, G. and Lawrence, T.B. (2010), "Technology, institutions, and entropy: understanding the critical and creative role of maintenance work", Phillips, N., Sewell, G. and Griffiths, D. (Ed.) Technology and Organization: Essays in Honour of Joan Woodward (Research in the Sociology of Organizations, Vol. 29), Emerald Group Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 259-264. https://doi.org/10.1108/S0733-558X(2010)0000029019

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2010, Emerald Group Publishing Limited