Innovation, Learning, Communities, and Actor-Networks of Practice

Fox, Stephen and Vickers, David Andrew orcid iconORCID: 0000-0002-7220-8789 (2014) Innovation, Learning, Communities, and Actor-Networks of Practice. In: Learning Models for Innovation in Organizations: Examining Roles of Knowledge Transfer and Human Resources Management. IGI Global, Hershey, Pennsylvania, pp. 30-51. ISBN 9781466648845

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Abstract

This chapter addresses the question: Is there a virtuous circle between situated learning within communities of practice and the corporate pursuit of innovation in large companies? The authors trace a succession of ways in which it has been formulated, reframed, and addressed across a range and sequence of qualitative studies. Overall, they argue for more ethnographic studies of organizational learning and innovation and recommend further use of actor-network theory, which has potential to add considerably to communities of practice theory. The authors illustrate this argument in the chapter through a discussion of Carlile's (2002) important paper and cite a number of other studies that use actor-network theory in combination with communities of practice theory.


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