Dubravka Cecez-Kecmanovic
School of Information Systems and Technology Management - PhD Information Systems, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia | MSc Systems Theory and Information Systems, University of Belgrade, Republic of Serbia | BSc (Hons) Electrical Engineering and Control Theory, University of Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina
My research interests have evolved from Information Systems (IS) development, use and implications in organisational contexts, to broader social adoption and implications of Information Technologies, including more recently digitalization, datafication and AI. As a researcher, supervisor and teacher for many years I developed interest in theoretical foundations and methodological advancements of IS research. In my empirical studies I found particularly insightful interpretive and critical social approaches and affiliated qualitative research methods. In recent decade, my empirical studies of digital work (eg. crowdsourcing, digital nomadism) and algorithmic automation of decision-making (in public sector), among others, led to exploration and adoption of sociomaterial and process oriented research perspectives. These perspectives open new horizons in understanding digital transformation and its ethical consequences.
From This Author
How digital nomads impact local communities: A Chiang Mai case study
Digital nomads can be catalysts for economic and cultural change. New research examines their impact on Chiang Mai and the implications for other cities
Digital nomads: five key insights into the future of knowledge work
The post-pandemic future of knowledge work presents two very different options, but UNSW Business School experts say it is up to us to move towards the future we want
5 keys to working from home effectively through coronavirus
Maintaining productivity, health and wellbeing during the coronavirus lockdown has been a tricky task for many, but past research into adapting positively to working from home offers some reassurance, according to UNSW remote working experts
When algorithms go rogue the havoc is all too human
Decisions are polluted as artificial systems reinforce programming biases
Are we becoming too connected for our own good?
New research sheds light on the dark side to being on call