posted on 2015-02-05, 14:02authored byGeoffrey Lightfoot, Tomasz P. Wisniewski
This paper fuses Lukes' (1974) three-dimensional view of power with
the economic concept of informational asymmetry to explicate how
access to information is organized and how power relationships arise
from this organization. We argue that many observed asymmetries are
deliberate and, drawing from the economics and finance literature,
we posit that their outcomes are inevitably detrimental. The paper
examines the techniques that foster information imbalances, such as
media and propaganda, knowledge production, educational systems,
legal and organizational structures, exclusive information networks, and
surveillance. We conclude that in the absence of greater transparency,
the deleterious effects of unequal access to information will continue
and deepen. We further suggest that the analysis of the complexities of
the issues warrants a broad, multidisciplinary approach and we suggest
what this might include.
History
Citation
Information and Organization 24 (2014) 214–235
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SOCIAL SCIENCE/School of Management