With the development of informational capitalism and the network society, globalization and informatization play an increasingly crucial role for understanding technology and society. Informatization describes a qualitative leap in technology development which opens up new dimensions of productivity by information modelling on the one hand, but which demands new forms of knowledge of information workers on the other hand. Work is becoming more flexible, but also more precarious and more polarized socially. These tendencies create a contradictory situation for the subject: formalization and new scopes of autonomy exist side by side. This constellation allows for new approaches to the social shaping of technologies. But they presuppose a fundamental change in attitude by both, system developers and social scientists. © 2006 International Federation for Information Processing.
CITATION STYLE
Schmiede, R. (2006). Knowledge, work and subject in informational capitalism. In IFIP International Federation for Information Processing (Vol. 223, pp. 333–354). https://doi.org/10.1007/978-0-387-37876-3_27
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