1 Introduction: New Ways of Working, Organizations and Organizing in the Digital Age
Nathalie Mitev Jeremy Aroles Kathleen A. Stephenson Julien Malaurent
Part I New Ways of Working and the Sharing Economy
2 Platforms and the New Division of Labor Between Humans and Machines
Attila Marton Hamid Ekbia
3 Social Media as a New Workspace: How Working Out Loud (Re)Materializes Work
Claudine Bonneau Nada Endrissat Viviane Sergi
4 Institutionalizing Crowdwork as a Mode of Employment: The Case of Crowdworkers in Nigeria
Ayomikun Idowu Amany Elbanna
Part II New Ways of Working and Collaborative Spaces
5 Materiality as Ingredients of Events: Comprehending Materiality as a Temporal Phenomenon in a Makerspace
Anthony Hussenot
6 The Role of Digital Materiality for Organizing a Living LabPhilippe Eynaud Julien Malaurent
7 Do Coworking Spaces Promise a Revolution or Spark Revenge? A Foucauldian Spatio-Material Approach to the Re-spatialization of Remote Work in Coworking Spaces
Aurélie Leclercq-Vandelannoitte
8 More than Perks and a Shared Office: How Coworking Spaces Participate in Entrepreneurs' Resource Acquisition
Kutay Güneştepe Zehra Topal Deniz Tunçalp
Part III New Ways of Working and Telework
9 From De-materialization to Re-materialization: A Social Dynamics Approach to New Ways of Working
Michel Ajzen
10 Work/Non-work? Laminated Boundary-Tensions and Affective Capabilities: A Case of Mobile Consulting
Natalie Paleothodoros
Part IV New Ways of Working and Organizational Spaces
11 Space for Tensions: A Lefebvrian Perspective on New Ways of WorkingAndrea Simone Barth Susanne Blazejewski
12 Beyond Flexibility: Confronting Conceived and Lived Spaces of New Ways of Working
Grégory Jemine Sophie Fauconneau-Dufresne François Pichault Giseline Rondeaux
13 Transmateriality of Architectural Representation and Perception
Angela Bargenda
14 Technology and the Simultaneous Collapsing and Expanding of Organizational Space: A COVID-19 ExperienceAnouk Mukherjee
Part V Organizational Aspects of New Ways of Working
15 From Innovations at Work to Innovative Ways of Conceptualizing Organization: A Brief History of Organization Studies
Lise Arena Anthony Hussenot
16 Community Management Practices in Coworking Spaces: Being the 'Catalyst'
Aurore Dandoy
17 Rise and Fall of a New Way of Working: A Testament of an Organizational Identity Mimicry
Marie Antoine
18 Deconstructing New Ways of Working: A Five-Dimensional Conceptualization Proposal
Grégory Jemine
About the Author: Nathalie Mitev was associate professor at the London School of Economics. She focuses on in-depth qualitative and critical research on the organizational aspects of information systems. She has published in a range of journals and is co-editor of 'Materiality and Space', 'Materiality and Time', 'Materiality, Rules and Regulation' and 'Materiality and Managerial Techniques', published by Palgrave Macmillan.
Jeremy Aroles is an Assistant Professor in Organization Studies at Durham University, UK. His research focuses on the emergence of new ways of working, the management of cultural institutions, and the relation between fiction and organizational worlds. His research has notable been published in Organization Science, Management Learning and New Technology, Work and Employment.
Kathleen Stephenson is an Assistant Professor of Organization Studies at the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, NL where she also earned her PhD in 2019. Kathleen was a Lecturer at the University of Liverpool Management School. Her research examines organizational space, organizational change and maintenance, and power. You can find her work in the Academy of Management Annals.
Julien Malaurent is Associate Professor of Information Systems at ESSEC since 2013. His research is published in top journals such as Journal of Management of Information Systems, European Journal of Information Systems, Journal of Information technology. He is also Senior Editor for the Information Systems Journal. His latest research analyzes, from a phenomenological and ontological lens, digital transformation processes happening at the societal level.