Abstract
Reflection note.
The increasing datafication of the workplace is often cast as a means of imposing organisational and managerial control on workers. This reflection note moves beyond this view and coins the term data-driven labour organising to discuss the potential of work- place datafication as a way to inform workers about their working conditions and how to use data to advocate for their collective goals. Forging a research agenda on data-driv- en labour organising, the reflection note engages with the historical roots of Scandinavi- an IS research, particularly the trade union (TU) approach. Mobilising the TU approach as a vantage point for re-imagining research on workplace datafication, the reflection note outlines three emerging research topics critical for shifting the research focus from using data for managerial purposes to using data for labour organising. The reflection note concludes by discussing how the TU tradition also invokes a certain research ethos of prac- tical and political engagement, prompting IS researchers to get their hands dirty by actively seeking to reshape the trajectory of digitalisation through practical engagement.
The increasing datafication of the workplace is often cast as a means of imposing organisational and managerial control on workers. This reflection note moves beyond this view and coins the term data-driven labour organising to discuss the potential of work- place datafication as a way to inform workers about their working conditions and how to use data to advocate for their collective goals. Forging a research agenda on data-driv- en labour organising, the reflection note engages with the historical roots of Scandinavi- an IS research, particularly the trade union (TU) approach. Mobilising the TU approach as a vantage point for re-imagining research on workplace datafication, the reflection note outlines three emerging research topics critical for shifting the research focus from using data for managerial purposes to using data for labour organising. The reflection note concludes by discussing how the TU tradition also invokes a certain research ethos of prac- tical and political engagement, prompting IS researchers to get their hands dirty by actively seeking to reshape the trajectory of digitalisation through practical engagement.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 2 |
Journal | Scandinavian Journal of Information Systems |
Volume | 36 |
Issue number | 1 |
Pages (from-to) | 13-38 |
Number of pages | 26 |
ISSN | 0905-0167 |
Publication status | Published - Jul 2024 |
Keywords
- Workplace datafication
- Algorithms at work
- Trade union approach
- Scandinavian IS history
- Worker participation
- Data work
- Data governance
- Data literacy