Digital transformation is permeating all domains of business and society. Digital Transformation and Institutional Theory explores how manifestations of digital transformation requires rethinking of our understanding and theorization of institutional processes. Showcasing a collaborative forum of organization and management theory scholars and information systems researchers, the authors enrich institutional theory approaches in understanding digital transformation.
Advancing institutional perspectives with an agenda for future research and methodological reflections, the chapters delve into digital transformations in relation to institutional logics and technological affordances, professional projects and new institutional agents, institutional infrastructure, and field governance. This volume deepens our understanding of the pervasive and increasingly important relationship between technology and institutions and the response of existing professions to the emergence of digital technologies. Moreover, the authors offer a cutting-edge analysis of how new digital organizational forms affect institutional fields, their infrastructure, and thus their governance.
Thomas Gegenhuber is Professor for the Management of Socio-Technical Transitions at Johannes Kepler University Linz and Visiting Professor at Leuphana University Lüneburg.
Danielle Logue is Associate Professor in Innovation, Entrepreneurship and Management at the University of Technology Sydney.
C.R. (Bob) Hinings is Professor Emeritus at the University of Alberta, Senior Research Mentor at the Haskayne School of Business, University of Calgary, a Fellow of Cambridge Digital Innovation, and an Honorary Research Fellow at the Judge School of Business, University of Cambridge.
Michael Barrett is Professor of Information Systems and Innovation Studies at Cambridge Judge Business School, University of Cambridge. He is also Academic Director of Cambridge Digital Innovation and Distinguished Visiting Professor of Innovation at the Stockholm School of Economics