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Software project work in an African context: myths, maps and messes

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Software project work in an African context: myths, maps and messes. / Adamu, Muhammad Sadi.
OzCHI'2020 Proceedings: 32nd Australian Conference on Human-Computer-Interaction. New York: ACM, 2020. p. 558-571.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNConference contribution/Paperpeer-review

Harvard

Adamu, MS 2020, Software project work in an African context: myths, maps and messes. in OzCHI'2020 Proceedings: 32nd Australian Conference on Human-Computer-Interaction. ACM, New York, pp. 558-571. https://doi.org/10.1145/3441000.3441071

APA

Adamu, M. S. (2020). Software project work in an African context: myths, maps and messes. In OzCHI'2020 Proceedings: 32nd Australian Conference on Human-Computer-Interaction (pp. 558-571). ACM. https://doi.org/10.1145/3441000.3441071

Vancouver

Adamu MS. Software project work in an African context: myths, maps and messes. In OzCHI'2020 Proceedings: 32nd Australian Conference on Human-Computer-Interaction. New York: ACM. 2020. p. 558-571 doi: 10.1145/3441000.3441071

Author

Adamu, Muhammad Sadi. / Software project work in an African context : myths, maps and messes. OzCHI'2020 Proceedings: 32nd Australian Conference on Human-Computer-Interaction. New York : ACM, 2020. pp. 558-571

Bibtex

@inproceedings{3f44ac5340094f4aaf2cd33f7b2fb08d,
title = "Software project work in an African context: myths, maps and messes",
abstract = "Research in HCI and CSCW has consistently shown how software design approaches are an abstract idealisation of work practices, raising questions regarding the appropriateness and applicability of what might be considered as {\textquoteleft}best practice{\textquoteright} or {\textquoteleft}doable practice{\textquoteright} in project work. Such issues have magnified the fundamental need for examining exactly how conventional (and generally Western) constructs, approaches and methods, widely adopted in the process of producing and deploying technologies, actually work. The paper reports findings from a study that seeks to understand the implications for adopting {\textquoteleft}well-known{\textquoteright} practices for framing, undertaking, and analysis distributed and collaborative software project in the context of Nigeria. Findings show that documenting and analysing what is often considered as {\textquoteleft}best practice{\textquoteright}, supposedly prescriptive maps and scripts for accomplishing work, necessitates considering how they get adopted, interpreted, and extended as {\textquoteleft}orderly{\textquoteright} and occasionally {\textquoteleft}messy{\textquoteright} alternatives, offering some sensitivities for understanding the translocal features and transitional meaning of agile project work. ",
author = "Adamu, {Muhammad Sadi}",
year = "2020",
month = dec,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1145/3441000.3441071",
language = "English",
pages = "558--571",
booktitle = "OzCHI'2020 Proceedings",
publisher = "ACM",

}

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - Software project work in an African context

T2 - myths, maps and messes

AU - Adamu, Muhammad Sadi

PY - 2020/12/31

Y1 - 2020/12/31

N2 - Research in HCI and CSCW has consistently shown how software design approaches are an abstract idealisation of work practices, raising questions regarding the appropriateness and applicability of what might be considered as ‘best practice’ or ‘doable practice’ in project work. Such issues have magnified the fundamental need for examining exactly how conventional (and generally Western) constructs, approaches and methods, widely adopted in the process of producing and deploying technologies, actually work. The paper reports findings from a study that seeks to understand the implications for adopting ‘well-known’ practices for framing, undertaking, and analysis distributed and collaborative software project in the context of Nigeria. Findings show that documenting and analysing what is often considered as ‘best practice’, supposedly prescriptive maps and scripts for accomplishing work, necessitates considering how they get adopted, interpreted, and extended as ‘orderly’ and occasionally ‘messy’ alternatives, offering some sensitivities for understanding the translocal features and transitional meaning of agile project work.

AB - Research in HCI and CSCW has consistently shown how software design approaches are an abstract idealisation of work practices, raising questions regarding the appropriateness and applicability of what might be considered as ‘best practice’ or ‘doable practice’ in project work. Such issues have magnified the fundamental need for examining exactly how conventional (and generally Western) constructs, approaches and methods, widely adopted in the process of producing and deploying technologies, actually work. The paper reports findings from a study that seeks to understand the implications for adopting ‘well-known’ practices for framing, undertaking, and analysis distributed and collaborative software project in the context of Nigeria. Findings show that documenting and analysing what is often considered as ‘best practice’, supposedly prescriptive maps and scripts for accomplishing work, necessitates considering how they get adopted, interpreted, and extended as ‘orderly’ and occasionally ‘messy’ alternatives, offering some sensitivities for understanding the translocal features and transitional meaning of agile project work.

U2 - 10.1145/3441000.3441071

DO - 10.1145/3441000.3441071

M3 - Conference contribution/Paper

SP - 558

EP - 571

BT - OzCHI'2020 Proceedings

PB - ACM

CY - New York

ER -