TY - JOUR A1 - Kühler, Jakob A1 - Drathschmidt, Nicolas A1 - Großmann, Daniela T1 - ‘Modern talking’ BT - narratives of agile by German public sector employees JF - Information polity N2 - Despite growing interest, we lack a clear understanding of how the arguably ambiguous phenomenon of agile is perceived in government practice. This study aims to alleviate this puzzle by investigating how managers and employees in German public sector organisations make sense of agile as a spreading management fashion in the form of narratives. This is important because narratives function as innovation carriers that ultimately influence the manifestations of the concept in organisations. Based on a multi-case study of 31 interviews and 24 responses to a qualitative online survey conducted in 2021 and 2022, we provide insights into what public sector managers, employees and consultants understand (and, more importantly, do not understand) as agile and how they weave it into their existing reality of bureaucratic organisations. We uncover three meta-narratives of agile government, which we label ‘renew’, ‘complement’ and ‘integrate’. In particular, the meta-narratives differ in their positioning of how agile interacts with the characteristics of bureaucratic organisations. Importantly, we also show that agile as a management fad serves as a projection surface for what actors want from a modern and digital organisation. Thus, the vocabulary of agile government within the narratives is inherently linked to other diffusing phenomena such as new work or digitalisation. KW - agile government KW - agility KW - narratives KW - public administration KW - public sector organizations KW - fashion KW - digital transformation KW - interpretative research Y1 - 2024 U6 - https://doi.org/10.3233/IP-230059 SN - 1570-1255 SN - 1875-8754 VL - 29 IS - 2 SP - 199 EP - 216 PB - IOS Press CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - XinYing, Chew A1 - Tiberius, Victor A1 - Alnoor, Alhamzah A1 - Camilleri, Mark A1 - Khaw, Khai Wah T1 - The dark side of metaverse: a multi-perspective of deviant behaviors from PLS-SEM and fsQCA findings JF - International journal of human–computer interaction N2 - The metaverse has created a huge buzz of interest because such a phenomenon is emerging. The behavioral aspect of the metaverse includes user engagement and deviant behaviors in the metaverse. Such technology has brought various dangers to individuals and society. There are growing cases reported of sexual abuse, racism, harassment, hate speech, and bullying because of online disinhibition make us feel more relaxed. This study responded to the literature call by investigating the effect of technical and social features through mediating roles of security and privacy on deviant behaviors in the metaverse. The data collected from virtual network users reached 1121 respondents. Partial Least Squares based structural equation modeling (PLS-SEM) and fuzzy set Qualitative Comparative Analysis (fsQCA) were used. PLS-SEM results revealed that social features such as user-to-user interaction, homophily, social ties, and social identity, and technical design such as immersive experience and invisibility significantly affect users’ deviant behavior in the metaverse. The fsQCA results provided insights into the multiple causal solutions and configurations. This study is exceptional because it provided decisive results by understanding the deviant behavior of users based on the symmetrical and asymmetrical approach to virtual networks. KW - deviant behaviors KW - metaverse KW - sociotechnical KW - perspective KW - privacy KW - fsQCA Y1 - 2024 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1080/10447318.2024.2331875 SN - 1044-7318 SN - 1532-7590 PB - Taylor & Francis CY - London ER -