Latour, Bruno - John Law Notes On ANT

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John Law

'Notes on the Theory of the


Actor Network: Ordering,
Strategy and Heterogeneity'
First published 1992

Introduction

Just occasionally we find ourselves watching on the sidelines as an order comes crashing
down. Organisations or systems which we had always taken for granted -- the Union of Soviet
Socialist Republics, or Continental Illinois -- are swallowed up. Commissars, moguls and
captains of industry disappear from view. These dangerous moments offer more than political
promise. For when the hidden trapdoors of the social spring open we suddenly learn that the
masters of the universe may also have feet of clay.

How is it that it ever seemed otherwise? How is that, at least for a time, they made themselves
different from us? By what organisational means did they keep themselves in place and
overcome the resistances that would have brought them tumbling down much sooner? How was
it we colluded in this? These are some of the key questions of social science. And they are the
questions that lie at the heart of "actor-network theory"(1) -- the approach to sociology that is the
topic of this note. This theory -- also known as the sociology of translation -- is concerned with
the mechanics of power. It suggests, in effect, that we should analyse the great in exactly the
same way that we would anyone else. Of course, this is not to deny that the nabobs of this
world are powerful. They certainly are. But it is to suggest that they are no different in kind
sociologically to the wretched of the earth.

Here is the argument. If we want to understand the mechanics of power and organisation it is
important not to start out assuming whatever we wish to explain. For instance, it is a good idea
not to take it for granted that there is a macrosocial system on the one hand, and bits and
pieces of derivative microsocial detail on the other. If we do this we close off most of the
interesting questions about the origins of power and organisation. Instead we should start with a
clean slate. For instance, we might start with interaction and assume that interaction is all that
there is. Then we might ask how some kinds of interactions more or less succeed in stabilising
and reproducing themselves: how it is that they overcome resistance and seem to become
"macrosocial"; how it is that they seem to generate the effects such power, fame, size, scope or
organisation with which we are all familiar. This, then, is the one of the core assumptions of
actor-network theory: that Napoleons are no different in kind to small-time hustlers, and IBMs to
whelk-stalls. And if they are larger, then we should be studying how this comes about -- how, in
other words, size, power or organisation are generated.

In this note I start by exploring the metaphor of heterogeneous network. This lies at the heart of
actor-network theory, and is a way of suggesting that society, organisations, agents and
machines are all effects generated in patterned networks of diverse (not simply human)
materials. Next I consider network consolidation, and in particular how it is that networks may
come to look like single point actors: how it is, in other words, we are sometimes able to talk of
"the British Government" rather than all the bits and pieces that make it up. I then examine the
character of network ordering and argue that this is better seen as a verb -- a somewhat
uncertain process of overcoming resistance -- rather than as the fait accompli of a noun. Finally,
I discuss the materials and strategies of network ordering, and describe some orgnisationally-
relevant findings of actor-network theory. In particular, I consider some of the ways in which
patterning generates institutional and organisational effects, including hierarchy and power.
Society as Heterogeneous Network

Actor-network authors started out in the sociology of science and technology. With others in the
sociology of science, they argued that knowledge is a social product rather than something
generated by through the operation of a privileged scientific method. And, in particular, they
argued that "knowledge" (but they generalise from knowledge to agents, social institutions,
machines and organisations) may be seen as a product or an effect of a network of
heterogeneous materials.

I put "knowledge" in inverted commas because it always takes material forms. It comes as talk,
or conference presentations. Or it appears in papers, preprints or patents. Or again, it appears
in the the form of skills embodied in scientists and technicians (Latour and Woolgar, 1979).
"Knowledge", then, is embodied in a variety of material forms. But where does it come from?
The actor-network answer is that it is the end product of a lot of hard work in which
heterogeneous bits and pieces -- test tubes, reagents, organisms, skilled hands, scanning
electron microscopes, radiation monitors, other scientists, articles, computer terminals, and all
the rest -- that would like to make off on their own are juxtaposed into a patterned network which
overcomes their resistance. In short, it is a material matter but also a matter of organising and
ordering those materials. So this is the actor-network diagnosis of science: that it is a process of
"heterogeneous engineering" in which bits and pieces from the social, the technical, the
conceptual and the textual are fitted together, and so converted (or "translated") into a set of
equally heterogeneous scientific products.

So much for science. But I have already suggested that science isn't very special. Thus what is
true for science is also said to be true for other institutions. Accordingly, the family, the
organisation, computing systems, the economy and technologies -- all of social life -- may be
similarly pictured. All of these are ordered networks of heterogeneous materials whose
resistance has been overcome. This, then, is the crucial analytical move made by actor-network
writers: the suggestion that the social is nothing other than patterned networks of
heterogeneous materials.

This is a radical claim because it says that these networks are composed not only of people, but
also of machines, animals, texts, money, architectures -- any material that you care to mention.
So the argument is that the stuff of the social isn't simply human. It is all these other materials
too. Indeed, the argument is that we wouldn't have a society at all if it weren't for the
heterogeneity of the networks of the social. So in this view the task of sociology is to
characterise these networks in their heterogeneity, and explore how it is that they come to be
patterned to generate effects like organisations, inequality and power.

Look at the material world in this way. It isn't simply that we eat, find shelter in our houses, and
produce objects with machines. It is also that almost all of our interactions with other people are
mediated through objects of one kind or another. For instance, I speak to you through a text,
even though we will probably never meet. And to do that, I am tapping away at a computer
keyboard. At any rate, our communication with one another is mediated by a network of objects
-- the computer, the paper, the printing press. And it is also mediated by networks of objects-
and-people, such as the postal system. The argument is that these various networks participate
in the social. They shape it. In some measure they help to overcome your reluctance to read my
text. And (most crucially) they are necessary to the social relationship between author and
reader.

Here is a second example. I am standing on a stage. The students face me, behind seried ranks
of desks, with paper and pens. They are writing notes. They can see me, and they can hear me.
But they can also see the transparencies that I put in the overhead projector. So the projector,
like the shape of the room, participates in the shaping of our interaction. It mediates our
communication and it does this asymmetrically, amplifying what I say without giving students
much of a chance to answer back (Thompson :1990). In another world it might, of course, be
different. The students might storm the podium and take control of the overhead projector. Or
they might, as they do if I lecture badly, simply ignore me. But they don't, and while they don't
the projector participates in our social relations: it helps to define the lecturer-student
relationship. It is a part of the social. It operates on them to influence the way in which they act.

Perhaps it is only in lovemaking that there is interaction between unmediated human bodies --
though even here the extra-somatic usually plays a role too. But the general case, and the one
pressed by actor-network theory, is this. If human beings form a social network it is not because
they interact with other human beings. It is because they interact with human beings and
endless other materials too. And, just as human beings have their preferences -- they prefer to
interact in certain ways rather than in others -- so too do the other materials that make up the
heterogeneous networks of the social. Machines, architectures, clothes, texts -- all contribute to
the patterning of the social. And -- this is my point -- if these materials were to disappear then so
too would what we sometimes call the social order. Actor-network theory says, then, that order
is an effect generated by heterogeneous means.

At this point there is a parting of the ways. For the argument about the material patterning of the
social can be treated in a reductionist manner. The reductionist versions tell that either
machines or human relations are determinate in the last instance: that one drives the other (2).
However, though these reductionisms are different, they have two things in common. First, they
divide the human and the technical into two separate heaps. And second, they assume that one
drives the other.

Actor-network theory does not accept this reductionism. It says that there is no reason to
assume, a priori, that either objects or people in general determine the character of social
change or stability. To be sure, in particular cases, social relations may shape machines, or
machine relations shape their social counterparts. But this is an empirical question, and usually
matters are more complex. So, to use Langdon Winner's (1980) phrase, artefacts may, indeed,
have politics. But the character of those politics, how determinate they are, and whether it is
possible to tease people and machines apart in the first instance -- these are all contingent
questions.

Agency as Network

Let me be clear. Actor-network theory is analytically radical in part because it treads on a set of
ethical, epistemological and ontological toes. In particular, it does not celebrate the idea that
there is a difference in kind between people on the one hand, and objects on the other. It denies
that people are necessarily special. Indeed it raises a basic question about what we mean when
we talk of people. Necessarily then, it sets the alarm bells of ethical and epistemological
humanism ringing. What should we make of this? A clarificatory point, and then an argument.

The clarificatory point is this. We need, I think, to distinguish between ethics and sociology. The
one may -- indeed should -- inform the other, but they are not identical. To say that there is no
fundamental difference between people and objects is an analytical stance, not an ethical
position. And to say this does not mean that we have to treat the people in our lives as
machines. We don't have to deny them the rights, duties, or responsibilities that we usually
accord to people. Indeed, we might use it to sharpen ethical questions about the special
character of the human effect -- as, for instance, in difficult cases such as life maintained by
virtue of the technologies of intensive care.

Now the analytical point. This can be made in several ways. For instance, I could argue (as
have sociologists such as Steve Woolgar (1992) and psychologists of technology like Sherry
Turkle, 1984) that the dividing line between people and machines (and for that matter animals)
is subject to negotiation and changes. Thus it is easily shown that machines (and animals) gain
and lose attributes such as independence, intelligence and personal responsibility. And,
conversely, that people take on and lose the attributes of machines and animals.

However, I will press the argument in another way by saying that, analytically, what counts as a
person is an effect generated by a network of heterogeneous, interacting, materials. This is
much the same argument as the one that I have already made about both scientific knowledge
and the social world as a whole. But converted into a claim about humans it says that people
are who they are because they are a patterned network of heterogeneous materials. If you took
away my computer, my colleagues, my office, my books, my desk, my telephone I wouldn't be a
sociologist writing papers, delivering lectures, and producing "knowledge". I'd be something
quite other -- and the same is true for all of us. So the analytical question is this. Is an agent an
agent primarily because he or she inhabits a body that carries knowledges, skills, values, and all
the rest? Or is an agent an agent because he or she inhabits a set of elements (including, of
course, a body) that stretches out into the network of materials, somatic and otherwise, that
surrounds each body?

Erving Goffman's (1968) answer is that props are important, but the moral career of the mental
patient is not reducible to the props. Actor-network theory, like symbolic interaction (Star, 1990a;
1992) offers a similar response. It doesn't deny that human beings usually have to do with
bodies (but what of Banquo's ghost, or the shadow of Karl Marx?) Neither does it deny that
human beings, like the patients in the asylums described by Goffman, have an inner life. But it
insists that social agents are never located in bodies and bodies alone, but rather that an actor
is a patterned network of heterogeneous relations, or an effect produced by such a network.
The argument is that thinking, acting, writing, loving, earning -- all the attributes that we normally
ascribe to human beings, are generated in networks that pass through and ramify both within
and beyond the body. Hence the term, actor-network -- an actor is also, always, a network.

The argument can easily be generalised. For instance, a machine is also a heterogeneous
network -- a set of roles played by technical materials but also by such human components as
operators, users and repair-persons. So, too, is a text. All of these are networks which
participate in the social. And the same is true for organisations and institutions: these are more
or less precariously patterned roles played by people, machines, texts, buildings, all of which
may offer resistance.

Punctualisation and Resourcing

Why is it that we are sometimes but only sometimes aware of the networks that lie behind and
make up an actor, an object or an institution? For instance, for most of us most of the time a
television is a single and coherent object with relatively few apparent parts. On the other hand
when it breaks down, for that same user -- and still more for the repair person -- it rapidly turns
into a network of electronic components and human interventions. Again, for the average small
businessperson, the BCCI was a coherent and organised location for depositing and
withdrawing money. Now, however -- and even more so for the fraud investigators -- it is a
complex network of questionable -- indeed criminal -- transactions. And again, for the healthy
person, most of the workings of the body are concealed, even from them. By contrast, for
someone who is ill and even more so for the physician, the body is converted into a complex
network of processes, and a set of human, technical and pharmaceutical interventions.

Why is it that the networks which make up the actor come to be deleted, or concealed from
view? And why is this sometimes not the case? Let me start with tautology. Each of the above
examples suggests that the appearance of unity, and the disappearance of network, has to do
with simplification. The argument runs like this. All phenomena are the effect or the product of
heterogeneous networks. But in practice we do not cope with endless network ramification.
Indeed, much of the time we are not even in a position to detect network complexities. So what
is happening? The answer is that if a network acts as a single block, then it disappears, to be
replaced by the action itself and the seemingly simple author of that action. At the same time,
the way in which the effect is generated is also effaced: for the time being it is neither visible,
nor relevant. So it is that something much simpler -- a working television, a well-managed bank
or a healthy body -- comes, for a time, to mask the networks that produce it.

Actor network theorists sometimes talk of such precarious simplificatory effects as


punctualisations, and they certainly index an important feature of the networks of the social.
Thus, I noted earlier that I refuse an analytical distinction between the macro and the
microsocial. On the other hand I also noted that some network patterns run wide and deep --
that they are much more generally performed than others. Here is the connection: network
patterns that are widely performed are often those that can be punctualised. This is because
they are network packages -- routines -- that can, if precariously, be more or less taken for
granted in the process of heterogeneous engeering. In other words, they can be counted as
resources, resources which may come in a variety of forms: agents, devices, texts, relatively
standardised sets of organisational relations, social technologies, boundary protocols,
organisational forms -- any or all of these. Note that the heterogeneous engineer cannot be
certain that any will work as predicted. Punctualisation is always precarious, it faces resistance,
and may degenerate into a failing network. On the other hand, punctualised resources offer a
way of drawing quickly on the networks of the social without having to deal with endless
complexity. And, to the extent that they are embodied in such ordering efforts they are then
performed, reproduced in and ramify through the networks of the social(3).

Translation: Social Ordering as Precarious Process

I have insisted that punctualisation is a process or an effect, rather something that can be
achieved once and for all. Thus, actor-network theory assumes that social structure is not a
noun but a verb. Structure is not free-standing, like scaffolding on a building-site, but a site of
struggle, a relational effect that recursively generates and reproduces itself (4). The insistence
on process has a number of implications. It means, for instance, that no version of the social
order, no organisation, and no agent, is ever complete, autonomous, and final. Or, to put it
another way, it means that notwithstanding the dreams of dictators and normative sociologists,
there is no such thing as "the social order" with a single centre, or a single set of stable
relations. Rather, there are orders, in the plural. And, of course, there are resistances.

Caution is required here, for the theory is not pluralist in the usual sense of the term. It doesn't
say there there are many more or less equal centres of power or order. What it says is that the
effects of power are generated in a relational and distributed manner, and nothing is ever sown
up. And that, to use the language of classical sociology, ordering (and its effects including
power) is contestable and often contested. Thus I said earlier that human beings and machines
have their own preferences. This was an informal way of talking of resistance and the polyvalent
character of ordering -- of the way in which any particular effort at ordering encounters its limits,
and struggles to accept or overcome those limits. Another way of saying this is to note that the
bits and pieces assembled pro tem into an order are constantly liable to break down, or make
off on their own. Thus analysis of ordering struggle is central to actor-network theory. The object
is to explore and describe local processes of patterning, social orchestration, ordering and
resistance. In short, it is to explore the process that is often called translation which generates
ordering effects such as devices, agents, institutions, or organisations. So "translation" is a verb
which implies transformation and the possibility of equivalence, the possibility that one thing (for
example an actor) may stand for another (for instance a network).

This, then, is the core of the actor-network approach: a concern with how actors and
organisations mobilise, juxtapose and hold together the bits and pieces out of which they are
composed; how they are sometimes able to prevent those bits and pieces from following their
own inclinations and making off; and how they manage, as a result, to conceal for a time the
process of translation itself and so turn a network from a heterogeneous set of bits and pieces
each with its own inclinations, into something that passes as a punctualised actor.

The Strategies of Translation

How is the work of all the networks that make up the punctualised actor borrowed, bent,
displaced, distorted, rebuilt, reshaped, stolen, profited from and/or misrepresented to generate
the effects of agency, organisation and power? How are the resistances overcome? Here actor-
network theory engages with the question that I posed at the outset: how it is that we never saw
before that the Gorbachevs of this world really had feet of clay all along. For actor-network
theory is all about power -- power as a (concealed or misrepresented) effect, rather than power
as a set of causes. Here it is close to Foucault (1979), but it is not simply Foucauldian for,
eschewing the synchronic, it tells empirical stories about processes of translation. Indeed, there
is more than a hint of Macchiavelli in the method, and the author of The Prince is cited
approvingly by several actor-network theorists for his merciless analysis of the tactics and
strategies of power.

But what can we say about translation and the methods of overcoming resistance? Actor-
network theory almost always approaches its tasks empirically, and this is no exception. So the
empirical conclusion is that translation is contingent, local and variable. However, four more
general findings emerge:

(1) The first has to do with the fact that some materials are more durable than others and so
maintain their relational patterns for longer. Imagine a continuum. Thoughts are cheap but they
don't last long, and speech lasts very little longer. But when we start to perform relations -- and
in particular when we embody them in inanimate materials such as texts and buildings -- they
may last longer. Thus a good ordering strategy is to embody a set of relations in durable
materials. Consequently, a relatively stable network is one embodied in and performed by a
range of durable materials.

The argument is attractive, but it is not as simple as it may seem. This is because durability is
yet another relational effect, not something given in the nature of things. If materials behave in
durable ways then this too is an interactional effect. Walls may resist the escape attempts of
prisoners -- but only while there are also prison guards. Another way of putting it is that durable
material forms may find other uses: their effects change when they are located in new networks
of relations. In sum the argument about durability is attractive and has much merit -- but it needs
to be handled with caution.

(2) If durability is about ordering through time, then mobility is about ordering through space. In
particular, it is about ways of acting at a distance. Thus centres and peripheries are effects too,
effects generated by surveillance and control. The affinity with Foucault is obvious, but actor-
network theory approaches the matter somewhat differently. In particular, it explores materials
and processes of communication -- writing, electronic communication, methods of
representation, banking systems, and such apparent mundanities as early-modern trade routes.
In other words, it explores the translations that create the possibility of transmitting of what
Bruno Latour calls immutable mobiles -- letters of credit, military orders, or cannon balls. Once
again the stress is on precarious relational effects -- though with a strongly historical emphasis,
in part influenced by the "system-building" studies of such historians of technology as Thomas
Hughes (1983), and in part by the Annales school of materialist history with its insistence on the
"longue duree" (Braudel, 1975).

(3) Translation is more effective if it anticipates the responses and reactions of the materials to
be translated. This idea is not new -- it is, for instance, crucial to Macchiavellian political
science, and counts as a central theme in business history (Chandler, 1977; Beniger, 1986) --
though actor-network writers resist the functionalism and technological determinism which tends
to characterise the latter. Instead, they treat what Bruno Latour calls centres of translation as
relational effects and explore the conditions and materials that generate these effects and
contain the resistance that would dissolve them. Drawing on the work of historians (e.g. Ivins,
1975, Eisenstein, 1980) and anthropologists (Goody, 1977; Ong, 1982), they thus consider the
relationship between literacy, bureaucracy, print, the development of double-entry book-keeping,
and newer electronic technologies on the one hand, and the capacity to foresee outcomes on
the other. The argument is that under the appropriate relational circumstances such innovations
have important calculational consequences, which in turn increases network robustness.

Note, again, the caveat about relational circumstances. As Weber well understood, calculation is
not a deus ex machina. It is a set of social methods or relations in its own right. Furthermore, it
can only work on material representations -- the products of surveillance which are also
relational effects. Thus as I have indicated, systems of representation -- of immutable mobiles --
are also precarious. The analogy with the problem of political representation is direct, for as with
any other form of translation, representation is fallible, and it cannot be foretold whether a
representative will successfully speak for (and so mask) what it claims to represent.
(4) Finally there is the issue of the scope of ordering. I have been pressing the view that this is
local. But, arguably it is possible to impute somewhat general strategies of translation to
networks, strategies which, like Foucauldian discourses, ramify through and reproduce
themselves in a range of network instances or locations. Note that if these exist they are more
or less implicit -- for explicit strategic calculation is only possible if there is already a centre of
translation (5).

What might such strategies look like? This, again, is an empirical matter. But since no ordering
is ever complete, we might expect a series of strategies to coexist and interact. This, at any
rate, is the claim made by several actor-network writers. Thus in a recent study of management
I have detected a range of strategies -- "enterprise", "administration", "vocation" and "vision" --
which collectively operate to generate multi-strategic agents, organisational arrangements and
inter-organisational transactions. Indeed, the argument is that an organisation may be seen as a
set of such strategies which operate to generate complex configurations of network durability,
spatial mobility, systems of representation and calculability -- configurations which have the
effect of generating the centre/periphery asymmetries and hierarchies characteristic of most
formal organisations.

Conclusion

In this note I have described actor-network theory and suggested that this is a relational and
process-oriented sociology that treats agents, organisations, and devices as interactive effects. I
have touched on some of the ways in which such effects are generated, and emphasised their
heterogeneity, their uncertainty, and their contested character. In particular, I have argued that
social structure is better treated as a verb than as a noun.

As is obvious, the approach has a number of points in common with other sociologies. However,
its relational materialism is quite distinctive. To be sure, materialism is not new to sociology.
Nevertheless, materialism and social relations have not always been the happiest of bedfellows.
In the best sociologies such as Marxism and feminism they have interacted. Even so, it has
been usual to treat them as if they were naturally different in kind, as a dualism rather than a
continuity. However, as the dualisms fall in sociology, the actor-network approach joins the party
in a radical spirit, for it not only effaces the analytical divisions between agency and structure,
and the macro- and the micro-social, but it also asks us to treat different materials -- people,
machines, "ideas" and all the rest -- as interactional effects rather than primitive causes. The
actor-network approach is thus a theory of agency, a theory of knowledge, and a theory of
machines. And, more importantly, it says that we should be exploring social effects, whatever
their material form, if we want to answer the "how" questions about structure, power and
organisation. This is the basic argument: to the extent that "society" recursively reproduces itself
it does so because it is materially heterogeneous. And sociologies that do not take machines
and architectures as seriously as they do people will never solve the problem of reproduction.

What does actor-network theory have to say to the sociology of organisations? One answer is
that it defines a set of questions for exploring the precarious mechanics of organisation. I have
implied above that these questions come in several forms. Thus it is convenient to distinguish,
on the one hand, between questions to do with the materials of organisation, and on the other,
with those to do with the strategy of organisation. So when actor-network theory explores the
character of organisation, it treats this as an effect or a consequence -- the effect of interaction
between materials and strategies of organisation.

These, then, are the kinds of questions it asks of organisations, and the powerful who head
those organisations. What are the kinds of heterogeneous bits and pieces created or mobilised
and juxtaposed to generate organisational effects? How are they juxtaposed? How are
resistances overcome? How it is (if at all) that the material durability and transportability
necessary to the organisational patterning of social relations is achieved? What are the
strategies being performed throughout the networks of the social as a part of this? How far do
they spread? How widely are they performed? How do they interact? How it is (if at all) that
organisational calculation is attempted? How (if at all) are the results of that calculation
translated into action? How is it (if at all) that the heterogeneous bits and pieces that make up
organisation generate an asymmetrical relationship between periphery and centre? How is it, in
other words, that a centre may come to speak for and profit from, the efforts of what has been
turned into a periphery? How is it that a manager manages?

Looked at in this way organisation is an achievement, a process, a consequence, a set of


resistances overcome, a precarious effect. Its components -- the hierarchies, organisational
arrangements, power relations, and flows of information -- are the uncertain consequences of
the ordering of heterogeneous materials. So it is that actor-network theory analyses and
demystifies. It demystifies the power of the powerful. It says that, in the last instance, there is no
difference in kind, no great divide, between the powerful and the wretched. But then it says that
there is no such thing as the last instance. And since there is no last instance, in practice there
are real differences between the powerful and the wretched, differences in the methods and
materials that they deploy to generate themselves. Our task is to study these materials and
methods, to understand how they realise themselves, and to note that it could and often should
be otherwise.

Acknowledgements

I did not want to clutter the text, so I have included few references to actor-network theory in the
body of this note. (Citations will be found in footnote 1.) However, the note reports on a large
body of (substantially empirical) work by a series of authors. I am grateful to them all for their
support over a decade.

Notes

1. This is the product of a group of sociologists associated with, and in several cases located at,
the Centre de Sociologie de l'Innovation of the Ecole Nationale Superieure des Mines de Paris.
The authors associated with this approach include Madeleine Akrich (1989a; 1989b; 1992),
Geof Bowker (1988; 1992), Michel Callon (1980; 1986*; 1987; 1991; and Latour, 1981; and Law
and Rip, 1986), Alberto Cambrosio (et.al., 1990), Antoine Hennion (1985; 1989; 1990; and
Meadel, 1986; 1989), Bruno Latour (1985*; 1986; 1987*; 1988a; 1988b; 1990*; 1991a; 1991b;
1992a; 1992b), John Law (1986a*; 1986b; 1987; 1991a; 1991b; 1992a; 1992b; and Bijker, 1992;
and Callon, 1988*, 1992), Cecile Medeal (see Hennion and Medeal) Arie Rip (1986), and Susan
Leigh Star (1990b; 1991*; this volume; and Griesemer, 1989). Those items marked with an
asterisk might be particularly helpful for those not familiar with the approach.

2. Machine reductionism is current in the technological determinism of sociotechnical


organisational theory. Human reductionism is current in many sociologies -- for instance in
labour-process theory.

3. This is one of the places where actor-network theory maps onto the sociology of
organisations: the affinity between this argument and the theory of institutional isomorphism is
evident.

4. In this respect it is similar to several other contemporary social theories. Think, for instance,
of Giddens' (1984) notion of "structuration", Elias' (1978) theory of "figuration", or Bourdieu's
(1989) concept of "habitus".

5. This concern with implicit strategy is again consistent with Foucauldian sociology. See, for
instance Foucault: 1981: 94-5.

References

• Akrich, M. (1989a). De la position relative des localites: Systemes electriques et


reseaux socio-politiques. Cahiers du Centre d'Etudes pour l'Emploi 32, 117-166.
• Akrich, M. (1989b). La construction d'un systeme socio-technique: esquisse pour une
anthropologie des techniques. Anthropologie et Societes 13, 31-54.
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