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CfP: Special Issue of ORM on Video-Based Research Methods

  • 1.  CfP: Special Issue of ORM on Video-Based Research Methods

    Posted 05-21-2014 05:13
    Apologies for Cross Posting

    We invite you to submit papers for a Special Issue of Organizational Research Methods on  Video-Based Research Methods. 

    Submission date: 15 October 2014.

    Guest Editors: Paula Jarzabkowski, Curtis LeBaron, Katherine Phillips, and Michael Pratt

    Video technology has become irresistible as an instrument of data collection for many researchers. Recording equipment is now readily available, relatively inexpensive, and easy to use. Many organizations are now using video as a workplace tool for public broadcast, video conferencing, quality control, internal knowledge management, training, and more. Similarly, public events, such as congressional hearings, may now be video recorded, providing valuable extra-organizational data. Indeed, even in experimental research laboratories, which have long included video equipment, the prevalence of video as a medium of choice within our culture has expanded the possibilities for organizational research.


    For organizational research methods, the empirical advantages of video data are noteworthy. Video recordings can capture behavior in real time and can then be slowed, zoomed and replayed, enabling analysts to be careful, precise, and consistent in generating accounts of organizational activity-who did what, when, where and how. Video recordings constitute a permanent record that others can watch and verify.


    While video provides ontological opportunities for researchers, it also has potential pitfalls. Too often, researchers regard video as a lens on reality, without fully appreciating that the most basic cinematic decisions constitute theories about the world and how it should be studied. Organization scholars need to be aware of underlying disciplinary assumptions associated with the various video methods available. Hence, a careful consideration of ontological, epistemological, and practical assumptions guiding video research is critical. 


    We are therefore calling for papers for a Special Issue of Organizational Research Methods on Video-Based Research Methods: http://orm.sagepub.com/site/includefiles/ORM_Call_for_Papers.pdf 


    We invite those of you working with or considering the challenges of video data to submit a paper. Please feel free to contact one of the editorial team for more information.


    Best wishes with your research,

    Paula, Curtis, Katherine and Mike


    Paula Jarzabkowski
    Professor of Strategic Management

    Cass Business School, City University London

    Mobile: +44 (0)7951 222114

    UK Tel: +44 (0)20 7040 0955

    Email: P.Jarzabkowski@city.ac.uk 

    Homepage: www.cass.city.ac.uk/experts/P.Jarzabkowski