Money Talks Symposium
September 12, 2014
Co-sponsored by Yale University’s Center for Cultural Sociology and UCI’s
Center for Organizational Research
http://ccs.research.yale.edu/events/money-talks/
COR End of Year Event 2014
Research Poster Presentation – 2013/2014 COR Grant Recipients
Friday, May 30th 12:15-1:30PM
SBSG 1321
Join us for lunch and an interactive afternoon learning about the diverse and exciting research conducted by our COR community. Please RSVP by Tuesday, May 27th by emailing cor@uci.edu.
Laura Kray, May 14th – “When Opportunity Knocks, Women are Disproportionately Deceived”
When Opportunity Knocks, Women are Disproportionately Deceived: Gender Stereotypes about the Ease of Being Misled Influence Negotiator Deception
Wednesday, May 14, 2014
3:00 – 4:30 PM
SB 112
Laura Kray
Professor
Warren E. and Carol Spieker Chair in Leadership
UC Berkeley, Haas School of Business
Ingrid Erickson, May 9th – “Beyond Nomadic: Mobility, Knowledge Work and Infrastructure”
Title: Beyond Nomadic: Mobility, Knowledge Work and Infrastructure
Date: Friday, May 9, 2014
Talk: 3pm
Location: 6011 Donald Bren Hall
Refreshments: 4:15 PM, to be served in the 5th floor lobby.
Ingrid Erickson
Assistant Professor
Department of Library and Information Science at the School of
Communication & Information
Rutgers University
Abtract: It is well documented, and indeed well discussed, that work in our current era is increasingly mediated by technology. At the same time, through economic forces such as the Great Recession and the expanded global economy, work has become more modular and project-based and less connected to fixed infrastructures common in manufacturing. Increasingly mobile and independent, many workers today act as professional satellites defined by their ability to dynamically orbit around clients, coworkers, and infrastructures themselves. These workers have been called ‘nomads’ for their highly mobile and dynamic work practices, yet we question whether this moniker clarifies the full extent of these work practices. This presentation focuses on conceptualizing and describing this category of worker and the associated work practices in an expanded frame, namely one begins to describe the interrelationships between mobility, knowledge work, and technological infrastructures.
Bio: Ingrid Erickson is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Library and Information Science at the School of Communication & Information at Rutgers University. She graduated with a doctorate from the Center for Work, Technology and Organization in the Department of Management Science & Engineering at Stanford University in 2009. Her current research looks at the connection of mobile technology, social media and new forms of organized behavior. She is also interested in innovations related to collaborative work practices and digital media and learning.
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