60
views
0
recommends
+1 Recommend
1 collections
    0
    shares
      • Record: found
      • Abstract: found
      • Article: not found

      Crisis as opportunity, disruption and exposure: Exploring emergent responses to crisis through digital technology

      editorial

      Read this article at

      ScienceOpenPublisherPMC
      Bookmark
          There is no author summary for this article yet. Authors can add summaries to their articles on ScienceOpen to make them more accessible to a non-specialist audience.

          Abstract

          We live in a technologically advanced era with a recent and marked dependence on digital technologies while also facing increasingly frequent extreme and global crises. Crises, like the COVID-19 pandemic, are significantly impacting our societies, organizations and individuals and dramatically shifting the use of, and dependence on, digital technology. The way digital technology is used to cope with crises is novel and not well understood theoretically. To explore the varied uses and impact of digital technologies during crises, we propose to view crisis as (1) opportunity, (2) disruption, and (3) exposure. Examining crisis as opportunity reveals how digital technologies enable experimentation and accelerate innovation while raising coordination challenges and risky implementation. Viewing crisis as disruption highlights how digital technologies enable the rapid shifting of organizational and occupational practices to new digital spaces, allowing work continuity, yet potentially distorting work practices and raising challenges of over-dependence. Finally, crisis exposes the societal implications in making visible and exposing digital inequalities and producing moral dilemmas for us all. We use these three perspectives to shed light on the varied uses of digital technologies in the COVID-19 crisis and suggest new avenues for research on crises more broadly.

          Related collections

          Most cited references118

          • Record: found
          • Abstract: not found
          • Article: not found

          Research Commentary—The New Organizing Logic of Digital Innovation: An Agenda for Information Systems Research

            Bookmark
            • Record: found
            • Abstract: not found
            • Article: not found

            Steps Toward an Ecology of Infrastructure: Design and Access for Large Information Spaces

              Bookmark
              • Record: found
              • Abstract: not found
              • Article: not found

              Rhetorical Strategies of Legitimacy

                Bookmark

                Author and article information

                Journal
                Information and Organization
                Published by Elsevier Ltd.
                1471-7727
                1471-7727
                4 March 2021
                March 2021
                4 March 2021
                : 31
                : 1
                : 100344
                Affiliations
                [a ]IESE Business School, University of Navarra, Av. Pearson 21, Barcelona 08034, Spain
                [b ]Leonard N. Stern School of Business, Kaufman Management Center, 44 West Fourth Street, 8-89, New York, NY 10012, United States of America
                [c ]Cambridge Judge Business School, University of Cambridge, Trumpington Street, Cambridge CB2 1AG, United Kingdom
                Author notes
                [* ]Corresponding author.
                Article
                S1471-7727(21)00010-5 100344
                10.1016/j.infoandorg.2021.100344
                9761401
                b580f7ff-0902-482a-b0bf-4a1c8205249f
                © 2021 Published by Elsevier Ltd.

                Since January 2020 Elsevier has created a COVID-19 resource centre with free information in English and Mandarin on the novel coronavirus COVID-19. The COVID-19 resource centre is hosted on Elsevier Connect, the company's public news and information website. Elsevier hereby grants permission to make all its COVID-19-related research that is available on the COVID-19 resource centre - including this research content - immediately available in PubMed Central and other publicly funded repositories, such as the WHO COVID database with rights for unrestricted research re-use and analyses in any form or by any means with acknowledgement of the original source. These permissions are granted for free by Elsevier for as long as the COVID-19 resource centre remains active.

                History
                Categories
                Article

                Comments

                Comment on this article

                scite_
                0
                0
                0
                0
                Smart Citations
                0
                0
                0
                0
                Citing PublicationsSupportingMentioningContrasting
                View Citations

                See how this article has been cited at scite.ai

                scite shows how a scientific paper has been cited by providing the context of the citation, a classification describing whether it supports, mentions, or contrasts the cited claim, and a label indicating in which section the citation was made.

                Similar content82

                Cited by24

                Most referenced authors687