When Flexible Routines Meet Flexible Technologies: Affordance, Constraint, and the Imbrication of Human and Material Agencies

MIS Quarterly, Vol. 35, No. 1, pp. 147-167, 2011

51 Pages Posted: 16 May 2010 Last revised: 15 Aug 2012

See all articles by Paul M. Leonardi

Paul M. Leonardi

University of California, Santa Barbara

Date Written: May 14, 2011

Abstract

Employees in many contemporary organizations work with flexible routines and flexible technologies. When those employees find that they are unable to achieve their goals in the current environment, how do they decide whether they should change the composition of their routines or the materiality of the technologies with which they work? The perspective advanced in this paper suggests that the answer to this question depends on how human and material agencies – the basic building blocks common to both routines and technologies – are imbricated. Imbrication of human and material agencies creates infrastructure in the form of routines and technologies that people use to carry out their work. Routine or technological infrastructure used at any given moment is the result of previous imbrications of human and material agencies. People draw on this infrastructure to construct a perception that a technology either constrains their ability to achieve their goals, or that the technology affords the possibility of achieving new goals. The case of a computer simulation technology for automotive design is used to illustrate this framework suggests that perceptions of constraint leads people to change their technologies while perceptions of affordance lead people to change their routines. I use this imbrication metaphor to suggest how a human agency approach to technology can usefully incorporate notions of material agency into its explanations of organizational change.

Keywords: affordance, constraint, technology, imbrication, agency, material, sociomateriality

Suggested Citation

Leonardi, Paul M., When Flexible Routines Meet Flexible Technologies: Affordance, Constraint, and the Imbrication of Human and Material Agencies (May 14, 2011). MIS Quarterly, Vol. 35, No. 1, pp. 147-167, 2011, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1607718

Paul M. Leonardi (Contact Author)

University of California, Santa Barbara ( email )

Phelps Hall
Santa Barbara, CA 93106
United States

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