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Unpacking the sociomaterial parameters of connectivity management practices in the Saudi academic context

Njod Aljabr (Department of Business Administration, Jubail Industrial College, Jubail Industrial City, Saudi Arabia)
Dimitra Petrakaki (Digital Futures at Work Research Centre, University of Sussex Business School, University of Sussex, Brighton, UK)
Petros Chamakiotis (Department of Management, ESCP Business School, Madrid, Spain)

Information Technology & People

ISSN: 0959-3845

Article publication date: 29 March 2024

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Abstract

Purpose

Existing research on how professionals manage after-hours connectivity to work has been dominated by studies on the strategies/practices individuals develop. In these studies, mobile technology is perceived as a tool or an enabler that supports otherwise human-centric connectivity decisions. This view sees technology as separate or external to the organisation, missing out on its nuanced role in shaping connectivity decisions. Our study aims to bring technology back into the sociomaterially imbricated context of connectivity and to unpack its parameters.

Design/methodology/approach

Drawing on data collected from documents and semi-structured interviews, we adopt the framework of “sociomaterial imbrications” (Leonardi, 2011) to understand the social and material parameters that influence connectivity management practices at two different academic institutions in Saudi Arabia.

Findings

The study identifies a set of social and material parameters (organisational, individual, technological and situational) that imbricate to shape, collectively and not individually, professionals’ connectivity management practices. Connectivity decisions to change practice (such as decisions of where, when or why to connect) or technology (how to connect) are not as distinct as they appear but originate from, and are founded on, imbricated sociomaterial parameters. Our study further suggests that connectivity decisions are shaped by individuals’ perceptions of sociomaterial imbrications, but decisions are not solely idiosyncratic. The context within which connectivity decisions are taken influences the type of decisions made.

Originality/value

Connectivity management emerged from sociomaterial imbrications within a context constitutive of four interacting parameters: organisational, technological, situational and individual. Decisions around the “how” and the “what” of connectivity – i.e. the practice of connectivity and its underpinning technology – originate from how people perceive sociomaterial imbrications as enabling or constraining within a context. Individual perceptions account for changes in practice and in technology, but the context they find themselves in is also important. For instance, we show that professionals may perceive a certain technology as affording, but eventually they may use another technology for communications due to social norms.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank the research participants at the two institutions. Data collection was enabled by support from the Government of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.

Citation

Aljabr, N., Petrakaki, D. and Chamakiotis, P. (2024), "Unpacking the sociomaterial parameters of connectivity management practices in the Saudi academic context", Information Technology & People, Vol. ahead-of-print No. ahead-of-print. https://doi.org/10.1108/ITP-05-2023-0442

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2024, Emerald Publishing Limited

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