SOCIOLOGICAL KNOWLEDGE IN THE CONTEXT OF INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT
Table of contents
Share
QR
Metrics
SOCIOLOGICAL KNOWLEDGE IN THE CONTEXT OF INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT
Annotation
PII
S0132-16250000380-4-1
Publication type
Article
Status
Published
Pages
13-22
Abstract
The article is devoted to consideration of changes that influenced the development of information technology are exposed to sociological theory, data and methods of sociological research: end the domination polling methods, a shift of focus from theories to methods work with the data the changing nature of explanation, rethinking the notions of sampling and representativeness; the democratization of knowledge production.
Keywords
methodology, production of scientific knowledge, information technology, digital sociology, performativity
Date of publication
01.06.2015
Number of purchasers
1
Views
431
Readers community rating
0.0 (0 votes)
Cite Download pdf

References



Additional sources and materials

Gouldner A. Nastupayuschij krizis zapadnoj sotsiologii. SPb.: Nauka, 2003.

Dudina V.I. Vymyshlennyj krizis sotsiologii i kontury novoj ehpistemologii // Sotsiologicheskie issledovaniya. 2013. № 10. S. 13–21.

Ivanov D.V. Ehtapy ehvolyutsii sotsiologii i dominantnye tipy teoretizirovaniya // Sotsiologicheskie issledovaniya. 2013. № 9. S. 3–13.

Lo D. Optika oprosa // Sotsiologiya vlasti. 2012. № 4–5(1). S. 218–239.

Anderson C. The End of Theory: The Data Deluge Makes the Scientific Method Obsolete // WiredMagazine. 23.06.2008. URL: http://www.wired.com/science/discoveries/magazine/16-07/pb_theory(data obrascheniya: 01.04.2014).

Box G.E.P., Norman R.D. Empirical Model-Building and Response Surfaces, Wiley, 1987.

Boyd D., Crawford K. Critical Questions for Big Data// Information, Communication and Society. 2012.Vol. 15. № 5. P. 662–679.

Callon M. Embeddedness of Economic Markets in Economics // The Laws of the Market / Ed. M. Callon.Oxford: Blackwell, 1998. P. 1–57.

Callon M. What does it mean to say Economics is Performative? // Do Economists MakeMarkets? Onthe Performativity of Economics / Ed. D. MacKenzie, F. Muniesa, L. Siu. Princeton, NJ: PrincetonUniversity Press, 2007. P. 311–357.

Converse J.M. Survey Research in the United States: Roots and Emergence, 1890–1960. Berkley:University of California Press, 1987.

Etzkowitz H., Leydesdorff L. The endless transition: A “triple helix” of university–industry–governmentrelations // Minerva. 1998. № 36. P. 203–208.

Etzkowitz H., Leydesdorff L. The dynamics of innovation: from National Systems and “Mode 2” to a TripleHelix of university–industry–government relations // Research Policy. 2000. № 29(2). P. 109–123.

Gibbons M., Limoges C., Nowotny H., Schwartzman S., Scott P., Trow M. The New Production of Knowledge: The Dynamics of Science and Research in Contemporary Societies. London: SAGE,1994.

Gilbert E., Karahalios K. Predicting Tie Strength With Social Media // Proceedings of the SIGCHIConference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, 2009. URL: http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=1518736 (data obrascheniya: 01.04.2014).

Finch J.H. Economic sociology as a strange other to both sociology and economics // History of theHuman Sciences. 2007. № 20. P. 123–140.

Funtowicz S., Ravetz J. Science for the post-normal age. Futures 25. 1993. P. 735–755.

Hammersley M. The myth of research-based policy and practice. London: SAGE Publications, 2013.

Hessels L., Lente H. van. Re-thinking new knowledge production: a literature review and a researchagenda // Research Policy. 2008. № 37. P. 740–760.

Hubble N. Mass-Observation and everyday life: Culture, History, theory. 2006. Basingstoke.

Leydesdorff L., Meyer M. Triple Helix indicators of knowledge-based innovation systems: introductionto the special issue // Research Policy. 2006. № 35(10). P. 1441–1449.

Law J. After Method: Mess in Social Science Research. London: Routledge, 2004.

Lupton D. (2012) Digital sociology: an introduction// Sydney: University of Sydney, 2012. URL: http://ses.library.usyd.edu.au/handle/2123/8621 (data obrascheniya: 01.04.2014).

Macfarlane B., Cheng M. Communism, Universalism and Disisnterestedness: re-examining contemporarysupport among academics for Merton’s scientific norms // Journal of Academic Ethics. 2008. Vol. 6.P. 67–78.

MacKenzie D. An Engine, Not a Camera: How Financial Models Shape Markets. Cambridge: MIT Press,2006.

MacKenzie D., Millo Y. Constructing a Market, Performing theory: the Historical Sociology of a FinancialDerivatives Exchange // American Journal of Sociology. 2003. № 109. P. 107–145.

McKenzie D. Material Markets: How Economic Agents are Constructed? Oxford: Oxford University Press,2009.

Miller D. Turning Callon the right way up // Economy and Society. 2002. № 31. P. 218–233.

Merton R.K. Science and technology in a democratic order// Journal of Legal and political sociology.1942. № 1. P. 115–126.

Merton R.K. The sociology of science: Theoretical and empirical investigations. Chicago and London:University of Chicago Press, 1973.

Nowotny H., Scott P., Gibbons M. Re-Thinking Science: Knowledge and the Public in an Age ofUncertainty. Polity Press, Cambridge, 2001.

Orton-Johnson K., Prior N. (eds) Digital Sociology: Critical Perspectives. Houndmills: Palgrave Macmillan,2013.

Osborne T., Rose N. Do the social sciences create phenomena? The example of public opinion research // British Journal of Sociology. 1999. № 50(3). P. 367–396.

Rogers R. The End of the Virtual: Digital Methods. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2009a.

Rogers R. Post-demographic machines // Dekker A., Wolfsberger A. (eds) Walled Garden. Amsterdam:Virtueel Platform, 2009b.

Ruppert E., Law J., Savage M. Reassembling Social Science Methods: The challenge of digital devices //Theory, Culture and Society. 2013. № 30(4). P. 22–46.

Savage M., Burrows R. Some future reflections on the coming crisis of empirical sociology // Sociology.2009. № 43(4). P. 762–772.

Savage M., Burrows R. The coming crisis of empirical sociology // Sociology. 2007. № 41(5). P. 885–899.

Slaughter S., Leslie L.L. Academic Capitalism: Politics, Policies, and the Entrepreneurial University.Baltimore: John Hopkins University Press, 1997.

Sloan L., Morgan J., Housley W., Williams M., Edwards A., Burnap P., Rana O. Knowing the Tweeters:Deriving Sociologically Relevant Demographics from Twitter // Sociological research online. 2013.№ 18(3).

Tinati R., Halford S. Interrogating Big Data for Social Scientific Research – An Analytical Platform forVisualising Twitter // Internet, Politics, Policy 2012: Big Data, Big Challenges? Oxford, GB, 2012.URL: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/344873/2/ICWSM2012_-_Refluence_a_Real-Tiem_and_Historic_Visualisation_Application_for_Twitter_Conversations.pdf (data obrascheniya: 01.04.2014).

Wynn J. Digital sociology: emergent technologies in the field and the classroom // Sociological Forum.2009. № 24(2). P. 448–456.

Ziman J. Real Science: What it is, and What it Means. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2000.

Comments

No posts found

Write a review
Translate