Redirigiendo al acceso original de articulo en 23 segundos...
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Reaping the Advantages of Information and Modern Technology: Moving From Bureaucracy to Hyperarchy and Netcentricity

Fred Thompson    
L.R. Jones    

Resumen

This article focuses on the inherent contradiction between the basic building block of most non-market productive relationships ? hierarchy ? and the vision inspired by the architecture of modern information technology, especially the World Wide Web, of a more egalitarian culture in public organizations. Evans and Wurster (1997) have argued that, in the future, all knowledge-based productive relationships will be designed around fluid, team-based collaborative communities, either within organizations (deconstructed value chains), or collaborative alliances like the ?amorphous and permeable corporate boundaries characteristic of companies in the Silicon Valley? (deconstructed supply chains). They assert that, in these relationships everyone will communicate richly with everyone else on the basis of shared standards and that, like the Internet itself, these relationships will eliminate the need to channel information, thereby eliminating the tradeoff between information bandwidth and connectivity. ?The possibility (or the threat) of random access and information symmetry,? they conclude, ?will destroy all hierarchies, whether of logic or power.? We believe that we ignore the views such visionaries as Evans and Wurster at our peril. The World Wide Web, together with the canon that two heads are better than one, has created something immensely interesting and potentially transformative. The genius of the World Wide Web is, as Evans and Wurster explain, that it is (a) distributed (so that anyone can contribute to it), and (b) standardized (so that everyone else can comprehend the contributions). Random access and information symmetry jeopardize the power of gatekeepers of all sorts: political leaders, managers, functional staff specialists, and even experts to determine what information counts as evidence and what beliefs are sufficiently warranted to count as knowledge. In other words, they threaten nearly everyone with a vested interest in existing institutional arrangements. One does not expect folks to surrender position or power without a struggle. Furthermore, homo sapiens? need for leaders is evidently instinctive, deeply rooted in our simian brains. The need for hierarchy buttresses the status quo, even where the powerful are neither wise nor unselfish.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Erika Loucanová, Miriam Ol?iaková and Jana ?tofková    
The paper presents the results of a survey aimed at evaluating the attitudes of Slovak respondents toward eco-innovation purchasing power supplied on the Slovak market to propose an open business model that would support such purchasing power to increase... ver más

 
Mohammad Syafiudin,Fendy Suhariadi,Praptini Yulianti,Tatik Suryani     Pág. 192 - 202
Spiritual leadership has recently become a hot topic of discussion because it is related to organizational commitment. The success of organizational commitment is strongly supported by the presence of meaning, membership and empowerment. This research wa... ver más

 
Lanndon Ocampo, Joerabell Lourdes Aro, Samantha Shane Evangelista, Fatima Maturan, Kafferine Yamagishi, Dave Mamhot, Dina Fe Mamhot, Dawn Iris Calibo-Senit, Edgar Tibay, Joseph Pepito and Renissa Quiñones    
Current literature merely identifies the driving factors of research productivity in higher education institutions without directly examining their interrelationships that would offer some fundamental insights into the nature of these factors. Thus, this... ver más

 
Ardvin Kester S. Ong, Arianne R. Pequeña, Yogi Tri Prasetyo, Thanatorn Chuenyindee, Thapanat Buaphiban, Satria Fadil Persada and Reny Nadlifatin    
The beer industry is one of the businesses affected during the COVID-19 pandemic. Despite the exponential growth of the beer industry throughout the years, this aspect of the beverage industry has gained limited attention and has been underexplored. This... ver más

 
Mahfuzur Rahman, Izlin Ismail, Shamshul Bahri and Muhammad Khalilur Rahman    
This paper examines the antecedents of cashless payment systems among businesses in Malaysia. The adoption of cashless payment systems by businesses has the potential to reduce the costs related to handling huge amounts of cash in the market and enhance ... ver más