Problematizing speed in and around organizations: struggles over the temporal commons in the British artificial intelligence field
dc.contributor.advisor
Calvard, Thomas
dc.contributor.advisor
O'Toole, Michelle
dc.contributor.author
Baird, Christopher H.F.
dc.date.accessioned
2022-03-31T08:50:35Z
dc.date.available
2022-03-31T08:50:35Z
dc.date.issued
2021-12-02
dc.description.abstract
In recent decades, speed has emerged as a significant social scientific concern,
including within the field of management and organisation studies (MOS). However,
the literature on speed in MOS has developed according to several problematic
assumptions and agendas, namely: it assumes speed is predominantly a good thing,
should be evaluated in relation to economic value, prioritises managerial perceptions
of speed, privileges the antecedents to speed, and often treats speed as a general
ontological premise from which to theorise. By contrast, this thesis proposes a set of
alternative assumptions and agendas regarding speed research: taking full stock of
potential speed pathologies, adopting a stakeholder view to evaluate speed,
considering the speed experiences of marginalised voices, studying how speed is
actively resisted, and questioning the perceived omnipresence of speed. To explore
these critical re-conceptualisations of speed, this thesis undertakes an in-depth
empirical investigation of the British Artificial Intelligence (AI) field. Drawing on
Bourdieusian sociology, the British AI field is conceptualised as a structured social
space where various actors with different and often conflicting agendas and power
resources (i.e. capital) struggle over the field’s ‘temporal commons,’ that is, the set of
values, beliefs, practices, and structures regarding time and speed which are
considered ‘appropriate.’ Through an analysis of 33 interviews, micro-ethnographic
observation at 20 AI-events, historical-archival documents, and significant secondary
data, the major lines of conflict and division in the field are theorised under the
temporal parameters of ‘techno-scientific time’ versus ‘deliberative-democratic time’
and ‘machine-instantaneous time’ versus ‘human-reflective time.’ Under each
parameter, a range of speed advantages and speed pathologies are explored and
theorised. The power relations underpinning these struggles are also uncovered and
historicised. This thesis contributes to the theory on time and speed in organisation
studies as well as to more general debates regarding the sociology of speed. It builds
and extends the use of Bourdieu’s conceptual framework in MOS. Finally, it is of value
to the formation of policy and practice in the British AI field that is both empirically- and theoretically-grounded.
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dc.identifier.uri
https://hdl.handle.net/1842/38826
dc.identifier.uri
http://dx.doi.org/10.7488/era/2080
dc.language.iso
en
en
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
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dc.subject
management thinking about speed
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dc.subject
stakeholder approach to evaluate speed
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dc.subject
marginalised voices
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dc.subject
how speed is actively resisted
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dc.subject
institutional actors sense of time/speed
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dc.subject
pace to develop AI
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dc.subject
processing speeds of AI
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dc.subject
militarisation of AI R&D
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dc.title
Problematizing speed in and around organizations: struggles over the temporal commons in the British artificial intelligence field
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dc.title.alternative
Problematising speed in and around organisations: struggles over the temporal commons in the British artificial intelligence field
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dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
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dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
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dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
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