Judy Wajcman Explained
Judy Wajcman |
Main Interests: | Social Studies of TechnologyWork and EmploymentSociology of Time |
Major Works: | The Social Shaping of TechnologyFeminism Confronts TechnologyTechnoFeminismPressed for Time |
Website: | https://www.lse.ac.uk/sociology/people/judy-wajcman |
Judy Wajcman, [1] is the Anthony Giddens Professor of Sociology at the London School of Economics and Political Science.[2] She is the Principal Investigator of the Women in Data Science and AI project at The Alan Turing Institute. She is also a visiting professor at the Oxford Internet Institute. Her scholarly interests encompass the sociology of work, science and technology studies, gender theory, and organizational analysis. Her work has been translated into French, German, Greek, Italian, Korean, Japanese, Portuguese, Russian, Chinese and Spanish. Prior to joining the LSE in 2009, she was a Professor of Sociology in the Research School of Social Sciences at the Australian National University. She was the first woman to be appointed the Norman Laski Research Fellow (1978–80) at St. John's College, Cambridge.[3] In 1997 she was elected Fellow of the Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia.[4]
Wajcman was President of the Society for the Social Studies of Science[5] (2009-2011), and is the recipient of the William F. Ogburn Career Achievement Award of the American Sociological Association (2013). She received an honorary doctorate from the University of Geneva (2015) and was elected a Fellow of the British Academy (2016).[6] Her book Pressed for Time is the (2017) winner of the Ludwik Fleck prize of the Society for Social Studies of Science. In 2018, she received the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Oxford Internet Institute. In 2021, she was awarded the John Desmond Bernal prize by the Society for Social Studies of Science.
Research
Wajcman is probably best known for her analysis of the gendered nature of technology. She was an early contributor to the social studies of technology, as well as to studies of gender, work, and organisations.[7]
Selected bibliography
Books
- Book: Wajcman, Judy . Women in control: dilemmas of a workers co-operative . St. Martin's Press . New York City . 1983 . 9780312887377 . registration .
- Book: Wajcman . Judy . MacKenzie . Donald . Donald Angus MacKenzie . The social shaping of technology: how the refrigerator got its hum . Open University Press . Milton Keynes Philadelphia . 1985 . 9780335150267 .
- Book: Wajcman, Judy . Feminism confronts technology . Pennsylvania State University Press . University Park, Pennsylvania . 1991 . 9780271008028 . registration .
- Book: Wajcman, Judy . Managing like a man: women and men in corporate management . Pennsylvania State University Press . University Park, Pennsylvania . 1998 . 9780271018485 .
- Book: Wajcman, Judy . TechnoFeminism . Polity . Cambridge Malden, Massachusetts . 2004 . 9780745630441 .
- Book: Wajcman . Judy . Edwards . Paul . The politics of working life . Oxford University Press . Oxford New York . 2005 . 9780191556692 .
- Book: Wajcman . Judy . Hackett . Edward . Amsterdamska . Olga . Lynch . Michael . Michael Lynch (ethnomethodologist) . The handbook of science and technology studies . MIT Press Published in co-operation with the Society for the Social Studies of Science . Cambridge, Massachusetts . 2008 . 3rd . 9781435605046 .
- Book: Wajcman, Judy . Pressed for time: the acceleration of life in digital capitalism . The University of Chicago Press . Chicago . 2015 . 9780226196473 .
- Wajcman, Judy; Dodd, Nigel (2017).The sociology of speed: Digital, organizational, and social temporalities. Oxford, United Kingdom Oxford University Press. . OCLC 952384327.
Book chapters
- Frade, Renata & Wajcman, Judy (2023). "Feminism and Technology: an interview with Dr. Judy Wajcman by Renata Frade", in Frade, R. and Vairinhos, Mário (eds), Technofeminism: multi and transdisciplinary contemporary views on women in technology: Aveiro, UA Editora, ISBN 978-972-789-836-7https://ria.ua.pt/handle/10773/37656
Journal articles
- Wajcman . Judy . Feminism facing industrial relations in Britain . British Journal of Industrial Relations . 38 . 2 . 183–201 . 10.1111/1467-8543.00158 . June 2000 .
- Wajcman . Judy . Reflections on gender and technology studies: In what state is the art? . . 30 . 3 . 447–464 . 10.1177/030631200030003005 . June 2000 . 145345073 .
- Wajcman . Judy . Bittman . Michael . The rush hour: the character of leisure time and gender equity . . 79 . 1 . 165–189 . 10.1093/sf/79.1.165 . September 2000 .
- Wajcman . Judy . Martin . Bill . Riemens . Wendy . Bill Martin (sociologist) . Managerial and professional careers in an era of organisational restructuring . . 36 . 3 . 329–344 . 10.1177/144078330003600304 . December 2000 . 145639034 .
- Wajcman . Judy . Martin . Bill . Bill Martin (sociologist) . Markets, contingency and preferences: contemporary managers' narrative identities . . 52 . 2 . 240–264 . 10.1111/j.1467-954X.2004.00467.x . May 2004 . 145221734 .
- Wajcman . Judy . Bittman . Michael . Rice . James Mahmud . James Mahmud Rice . Appliances and their impact: the ownership of domestic technology and time spent on household work . . 55 . 3 . 401–423 . 10.1111/j.1468-4446.2004.00026.x . September 2004 . 15383094 . 1959.4/34267 . free .
- Wajcman . Judy . New connections: social studies of science and technology and studies of work . Work, Employment and Society . 20 . 4 . 773–786 . 10.1177/0950017006069814 . December 2006 . 10.1.1.1019.4527 . 144285950 .
- Wajcman . Judy . Life in the fast lane? Towards a sociology of technology and time . . 59 . 1 . 59–77 . 10.1111/j.1468-4446.2007.00182.x . March 2008 . 18321331 .
- Wajcman . Judy . Bittman . Michael . Brown . Judith E. . Families without borders: mobile phones, connectedness and work-home divisions . . 42 . 4 . 635–652 . 10.1177/0038038508091620 . August 2008 . 145203012 .
- Wajcman . Judy . Bittman . Michael . Brown . Judith E. . The mobile phone, perpetual contact and time pressure . Work, Employment and Society . 23 . 4 . 673–691 . 10.1177/0950017009344910 . December 2009 . 153550372 .
- Wajcman . Judy . Feminist theories of technology . . 34 . 1 . 143–152 . 10.1093/cje/ben057 . January 2010 .
- Wajcman . Judy . Rose . Emily . Constant connectivity: rethinking interruptions at work . . 32 . 7 . 941–961 . 10.1177/0170840611410829 . July 2011 . 145260573 .
- Wajcman . Judy . Jones . Paul K. . Border communication: media sociology and STS . . 34 . 6 . 673–690 . 10.1177/0163443712449496 . September 2012 . 143509758 .
- Ford . Heather . Wajcman . Judy . Heather Ford . 'Anyone can edit', not everyone does: Wikipedia's infrastructure and the gender gap . . 47 . 4 . 511–527 . 10.1177/0306312717692172 . 2017 . 28791929 . 32835293 .
- ‘How Silicon Valley sets Time’, New Media & Society, Vol. 21(6), 2019, pp. 1272–1289.
- ‘The Digital Architecture of Time Management’, Science, Technology, & Human Values, Vol. 44, No. 2, 2019, pp. 315–337.
Notes and References
- Web site: Wajcman, Judy . Library of Congress . 13 February 2015 . Sources: found: The Social shaping of technology, 1998: CIP t.p. (Judy Wajcman, Sch. Soc., Aust. Nat. Univ.) data sheet (b. 12/12/50) . https://web.archive.org/web/20171116030718/http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n83125461.html . 16 November 2017 . dead .
- Web site: Wajcman, Judy . . 10 June 2015 .
- Web site: Professor Judy Wajcman. London School of Economics and Political Science. 10 June 2015. 1 May 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20170501223830/http://www.lse.ac.uk/sociology/whoswho/academic/wajcman.aspx. dead.
- Web site: Academy Fellow: Professor Judy Wajcman FASSA. 2020-10-20. Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia. en-US.
- Web site: Past Presidents and Council Members: Presidents. 4sonline.org. Society for the Social Studies of Science. 10 June 2015. 10 June 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20150610070022/http://www.4sonline.org/past_officers. dead.
- Web site: British Academy announces new President and elects 66 new Fellows. 15 Jul 2016.
- News: Lyon . Stina . Pressed for time: The acceleration of life in digital capitalism, by Judy Wajcman (book review) . . TES Global . 22 January 2015 . 10 June 2015 . Her most significant message, however, relates to gender. Earlier work on the relationship between modernity, technology and time pressures engendered by the commodification of labour focused largely on men, as employers, capitalists and worker-employees, and thus on the labour process in the public domain of production, and not on the interrelated difficulties in "doing domestic time" in care, child-rearing and home maintenance. .