The
British Computer Society's SocioTech group hosts talks and events that relate to
IT technology and its social impact. The talks are an excellent opportunity to
find out about the variety of work in academic research and industry.


Hosted by Westminster Business
School

12th Annual
Lecture Series starting Dec 2010
=======================
London
Venue:
Marylebone
Road. (Opp. Baker Street Station, and Mme Tussauds)
Time:
6.15pm - 8.00pm including questions. Cost: Free. Coffee and biscuits provided.
All welcome! Especially PG students.
Directions
from Security
To ensure a
place, register as soon as possible with:
coakese@westminster.ac.uk
or
craig.shepherd@nottingham.ac.uk
Past lectures
on
www.bcs.org/sociotechnical
and updates on the group’s activities
Look for further
details nearer the time on
www.bcs.org/sociotechnical
======================================================
June 22nd
Willy Coupar
Director:
Bayswater Institute
Room: CG72
Employee Relations in the twenty-first century
–
Will it be Employee
Engagement or a role for TUs?
–
Employee Relations continues to be a major theme in many workplaces across the
UK. Despite the steady fall in trade union membership, and the reduction in the
number of disputes, flashpoints such as the recent BA strike remind us that
workplace conflict is still with us.
–
Unions continue to play a major role, especially in the public sector. The
threat of thousands of job cuts in that sector will create an atmosphere of
uncertainty and further conflict seems likely.
In
the private sector the role of unions is now increasingly concentrated in a
limited and declining number of industries. A clear north/south divide is
emerging as well.
More employee relations issues, individual or collective are being resolved by
recourse to law. This is a major change which shows no sign of slowing down.
Unlike the Thatcher government, the new administration shows few signs of
having an ideologically driven agenda for the workplace.
Instead employee engagement is being widely advocated as a breakthrough in how
organisations are managed, a source of measureable competitive advantage for
organisations,whilst taking staff along on a journey which promises to improve
their lives at work.
Governments are strongly committed to the idea. A major report " The McLeod
review" sets out key engagement principles and offers a list of practical
steps and case studies. The new government has recommitted and asked for further
work to be done on the topic.
At the same time a great deal of work is now being done in the research
community to test how effective employee engagement actually is. Researchers are
also seeking to validate the tools being used to measure engagement in
practice. Both the research and practitioner communities are divided. Is
Employee Engagement nothing more than “old wine in new bottles”. What does this
mean for the future of employee relations and for the role of unions? How should
researchers and practitioners interested in the field react?
This seminar sets out to identify answers to some of these questions.
William Coupar became the Director of the Bayswater Institute in 2009. He was
director of the IPA from 1997-2008 and led its Partnership Company
initiative. In 1999 he was asked by government to chair the Partnership Fund.
From 2000 – 2007 he was a member of the ACAS Council He was lead project manager
for the UKWON consortium which delivering multi-million pound projects for the
European Social Fund.
After university
he joined the transport industry working with five companies before joining
Chesterfield Transport as its managing director, where, in 1990, he led an
employee buy out .
He
has worked with many organisations helping them work through change management
and workplace issues in a mentoring or analytical role. He has worked with the
NHS, government agencies, in the voluntary sector and leading unions. At
European level he has worked with EWCs, with the Commission and with social
partners in Brussels.
=======================
13th
Year!
Oct
12th
Room tba
“Questioning Technology: A panel led discussion”
Panel topics:
1. What is Technology?
This presentation
explores whether technology is embedded in devices or whether there are
alternative perspectives
Dr
Roy Woodhead, Transformation & Integrated Services, HP
2. Which comes first, Science or Technology?
This presentation
questions the assumption that scientific knowledge has primacy over
technological knowledge and whether a different view could offer new approaches
to the development of new capabilities
Katie Walsh, IT Consultant, HP
3. What is our relationship with Technology?
This presentation
builds on the previous ones and explores the relationship between people and
technology and questions some of the assumptions many people hold
Dr
Kamaran Fathulla, International Academy, University of Essex
4. Open discussion
Each
presenter will take around 10 minutes to put forward views that will stimulate a
rich discussion.
Dr Roy Woodhead, HP
Roy
currently works for HP Transformation & Integration Services (TIS) and has a
diverse background spanning construction, consulting on some of the world’s
largest oil and gas investments, working with IT scientist in HP’s R&D labs and
socio-technical approaches to process improvement. He was a Senior Lecturer at
Oxford Brookes University for over ten years and engaged with Action Research
methods to achieve large scale innovation. Roy holds a PhD in complex group
decision making related to major Capital Investment projects from the University
of Leeds, and a First Class BSc (Hons) degree from Sheffield City Polytechnic.
He is currently managing a large scale transformation within the Service
Transition lifecycle stage on the largest IT infrastructure project in Europe.
Katie Walsh, HP
Katie has over 13 years IT experience gained from numerous IT projects across a
diverse spectrum of industry areas within the public and private sectors. She
currently works for HP Enterprise Services as a Consultant focusing on Service
Management. Her experience encompasses software development, requirement
elicitation and documentation, reporting and basic project management skills, as
well as developing good working relationships.
Katie’s education and experience is primarily focussed within technical
environments and she has focussed on gaining the hybrid skills that enable her
to understand both the technical and business aspects within IT. She holds a BSc
(Hons) 2:1 and Master degree. Additionally, Katie recognises the importance of
industry standard qualifications and holds an ISEB Diploma in Business Analysis
and ITIL V3 foundation certification. She is self motivated in her work,
education and career development aspirations.
Dr Kamaran Fathulla,
University of Essex
Kamaran Fathulla is a computing/electronic lecturer at the International
Academy, The University of Essex. Kamaran obtained his Master’s degree in User
Interface Design from Liverpool John Moore University and his PhD from the
University of Salford. Kamaran’s research work underpinned in the Multi
Aspectual philosophical work of the Dutch philosopher Herman Dooyeweerd.
Kamaran’s main research work is in diagrams and their uses in everyday life. He
also explores ways in which Multi Aspectual thinking can be applied to other
domains of interest. Kamaran is also the Editor of a newly established
electronic journal called IJMAP, International Journal of Multi Aspectual
Practice,
http://chimera69.essex.ac.uk/IJMAP
====================
look at our
Facebook page:http://www.facebook.com/pages/International-Journal-of-Sociotechnology-and-Knowledge-Development/161640167232626
and join the
LinkedIn group:
http://www.linkedin.com/groups/IJSKD-International-Journal-Sociotechnology-Knowledge-3925554?trk=myg_ugrp_ovr
Past lectures on
www.bcs.org/sociotechnical
and updates on the group’s activities
Don’t forget
the books too….
Coakes,
Willis & Lloyd-Jones The New Sociotech: Graffiti on the Longwall ;
Coakes,
Willis & Clarke Knowledge Management in the Sociotechnical World ;
Clarke,
Coakes, Hunter & Wenn Sociotechnical and Human Cognition Elements of
Information Systems;
====================================
12th
Annual Series
March 9th
Andrew
Woolfson, Director of Knowledge Management & Capability
Reynolds
Porter Chamberlain, LLP
The business application of social media and knowledge management.
================================
Dec
15th
Dr Shirley Atkinson
University of Plymouth
e-Safety and online risk
================================
11th
Annual Series – 2009-10
R&D versus Assembly Line? How Innovation, Creativity and
Discipline Interact in Software Development Cultures
by
Marilyn Bush: Meeting held June 22nd
click above to link to presentation.
====================================================
================================================
November 25th
Peter Duschinsky
The Change
Equation
file:///F:/WBS seminar duschinsky evening final.ppt
==============================
Wednesday 23rd September 2009
=====================
June 10th 2009
in
CG74
Colin
Beveridge
Fighting the Trillion Dollar
Bonfire :
joined-up management for a joined-up world™
=========================================================================
March 11th 2009
Tom Glib
Tom@Gilb.com
www.Gilb.com
The University of Lethbridge, Canada
Professor
Emeritus at Loughborough University
IT in the NHS –
National or Local Design?
===================
Light bulbs and Change –
systems thinking for new ventures
=================
==========================
May 9th
=========================================
Knowledge Ecosystems:
- Confronting Hyper-turbulent Environments
David’s
working papers are available on SSRN,
http://ssrn.com/author=745562
Paper 1 (http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=962535)
discusses the model of multi-tier hierarchies experiencing environmental
turbulence (extending March 1991) and the results observed.
Paper 2 (http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=984598)
discusses the empirical results observed for a model of IS-driven organizational
responsiveness and knowledge ecosystems. These were some of the initial results.
Paper 3 (http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=984600)
discusses the theoretical underpinnings of knowledge ecosystems and
hyperturbulent environments.