Bibliography of Rob Kling
Kling, R. (1966). Analogy and representation. Stanford Research Institute International: Artificial Intelligence Center.
Kling, R. (1968). Generating deviant sentences with a transformational grammar. Stanford Research Institute International: Artificial Intelligence Center.
Kling, R. (1970). Design implications of resolution strategies. Stanford Research Institute International: Artificial Intelligence Center.
Kling, R. (1970). The pdp-10 lisp trace package. Stanford Research Institute International: Artificial Intelligence Center.
Kling, R. (1970). The qa3.5 user’s manual. Stanford Research Institute International: Artificial Intelligence Center.
Kling, R. (1971). Reasoning by analogy and heuristic problem solving: A case study. Stanford Research Institute International: Artificial Intelligence Center.
Kling, R. (1971). Reasoning by analogy as an aid to heuristic theorem proving. In International Federation for Information Processing: Conference on digital computer applications to process control (Helsinki, Finland; June 2-5, 1971). Pittsburg, PA: Instrument Society of America.
Kling, R. (1972). A paradigm for reasoning by analogy. Artificial Intelligence, 2, 147-178.
Kling, R., Yatesand, R., & Raphael, B. (1972). The study of automatic theorem proving programs. Stanford Research Institute International: Artificial Intelligence Center.
Kling, R. (1973, October). Notes on the social impacts of AI. SIGART Newsletter, 42, 35-40.
Kling, R. (1973). Towards a person-centered computer technology. Proceedings of the Association for Computing Machinery annual conference (Atlanta, GA), 387-391. New York: ACM Press.
Kling, R. (1974). Computers and social power. Computers and Society, 5(3), 6-11.
Kling, R. (1974). Fuzzy planner. Journal of Cybernetics, 4(2), 105-122.
McCracken, D., Armer, P., Kling, R., et al. (The ACM Committee on Computers and Public Policy). (1974). A problem-list of issues concerning computers and public policy. Communications of the ACM, 17(9), 495-503.
Danziger, J., Dutton, W. H., Kling, R., Kraemer, K., & Mood, A. (1976). Future cities survey research design for policy analysis. Socioeconomic Planning Sciences, 10(5), 199-211.
Kling, R. (1976). EFTS: Social and technical issues. Computers and Society, 7(3), 3-10.
Kling, R. (1977). The organizational context of user-centered software design. MIS Quarterly, 1(4), 41-52.
Kling, R. (1977, June). Social choice and unresolved technical problems in electronic funds transfer systems (No. ICS TR #103). Irvine, CA: University of California, Irvine, Public Policy Research Organization.
Kling, R., Danziger, J., Dutton, W., King, J., & Kraemer, K. (1977). A survey of local government EDP practices. Governmental Finance, 6(3), 42-51.
Kling, R., & Gerson, E. (1977). The social dynamics of technical innovation in the computing world. Symbolic Interaction, 1(1), 132-146.
Crabtree, P., & Kling, R. (1978). DP sales ploys and counterploys. Datamation, 24(5), 194.
Kling, R. (1978). Automated information systems as social resources in policy making. In Proceedings of the Association for Computing Machinery annual conference (Washington D.C.; December 4-6), 2, 666-674. New York: ACM Press.
Kling, R. (1978). Automated welfare client-tracking and service integration: The political economy of computing. Communications of the ACM, 21(6), 484-493.
Kling, R. (1978). Electronic funds transfer systems and quality of life. In S.P. Ghosh, L.Y. Liu, & S.W. Miller (Eds.), Proceedings of the American Federation of Information Processing Society’s national computer conference (Anaheim, CA; June 5-8, 1978), 47, 191-197. Montvale, NJ: AFIPS Press.
Kling, R. (1978). The impacts of computing on the work of managers, data analysts, and clerks (No. PPRO WP-78-64). Irvine, CA: University of California, Irvine, Public Policy Research Organization.
Kling, R. (1978). Information systems in policy making: Computer technology and organizational arrangements. Telecommunications Policy, 2(1), 3-12.
Kling, R. (1978). The role of computing in white collar work (No. PPROWP-78-64). Irvine, CA: University of California, Irvine, Public Policy Research Organization.
Kling, R. (1978). Six models for the social accountability of computing. Information Privacy, 1(2), 62-70.
Kling, R. (1978). Value conflicts and social choice in electronic funds transfer systems developments. Communications of the ACM, 21(8), 642-657.
Kling, R., & Gerson, E. (1978). Patterns of segmentation and intersection in the computing world. Symbolic Interaction, 1(2), 24-43.
Kling, R., & Giordano, J. (1978, May). The use and impacts of automated document preparation: An empirical assessment (No. ICS TR 122). Irvine, CA: University of California, Irvine, Public Policy Research Organization.
Kling, R., Scacchi, W., & Crabtree, P. (1978). The social dynamics of instrumental computer use. SIGSOC Bulletin, 10(1), 9-21.
Kling, R. (1979). Alternative EFT developments and quality of life. Telecommunications Policy, 3(1), 52-64.
Kling, R. (1979). Introduction to the EFT symposium. Communications of the ACM, 22(12), 639-640.
Kling, R. (1979). Second conference on computers and human choice. Information Privacy, 1(8), 365-365.
Kling, R. (1979). Social issues and impacts of computing: From arena to discipline. In A. Mowshowitz (Ed.), Human choice and computers: Proceedings of the second IFIP conference on human choice and computers (HCC-2) (Vienna, Austria; June 4-8, 1979). Amsterdam: North Holland Publishing Company.
Kling, R., & Scacchi, W. (1979). The DoD common high order programming language effort (DoD-1): What will the impacts be? ACM SIGPLAN Notices, 14(2), 29-43.
Kling, R., & Scacchi, W. (1979). Recurrent dilemmas of routine computer use in complex organizations. In R.E. Merwin (Ed.), National Computer Conference (New York, NY; June 4-7, 1979). Montvale, NJ: AFIPS Press.
Kling, R. (1980). Alternative models for the social accountability of computing. Telecommunications Policy, 4(3), 168.
Kling, R. (1980). Computing people. Society, 17(2), 14.
Kling, R. (1980). The integration of computing in engineering work. Irvine, CA: University of California, Irvine, Department of Information and Computer Science.
Kling, R. (1980). Models for the social accountability of computing. Telecommunications Policy, 4(3), 166-182.
Kling, R. (1980). The social accountability of computing. Society, 17(2).
Kling, R. (1980). Social analyses of computing: Theoretical perspectives in recent empirical research. Computing Surveys, 12(1), 61-110.
Kling, R. (1980). The social and institutional meanings of electronic funds transfer systems. In K. Colton & K. Kraemer (Eds.), Computers and banking: Electronic funds transfer systems and public policy (pp. 183-195). New York: Plenum Press.
Kling, R. (1980). The social dynamics of computer use with technology of large ’social scope’: The case of material requirements and planning. Irvine, CA: University of California, Irvine, Department of Information and Computer Science.
Kling, R. (1980). Social issues and impacts of computing: A survey of North American research. In U. Kalben, F. Kruckeberg & J. Reese (Eds.), Gesellschlaftliche auswirkender informationstechnologie (pp. 148-199). Frankfurt/New York: Campus/Verlag.
Kling, R., & Lundegaard, K. (1980). Passing the digital buck. Society, 17(2), 42-49.
Kling, R., & Lundegaard, K. (1980). Passing the digital buck: Unresolved value and social issues in EFT developments. Society & Transactions, 17(2).
Kling, R., & Scacchi, W. (1980). Computing as social action: The social dynamics of computing in complex organizations. Advances in Computers, 19, 250-327.
Kling, R. (1981). Computer abuse and computer crime as organizational activities. Information Privacy, 3(5), 186-196.
Kling, R. (1981). Routine decision-making: The future of bureaucracy [Book Review]. Knowledge, 3(2), 279-283.
Kling, R., & Kraemer, K. (1981). The political character of computing developments: Citizen’s interests and government services. Irvine, CA: University of California, Irvine, Public Policy Research Organization.
Kling, R. (1982). Citizen orientation of automated information systems. Information Age, 4(4), 215-223.
Kling, R. (1982). Course description: Social impacts and issues of computing. Computers and Society, 12(4), 19-23.
Kling, R. (1982). Course syllabus and description: The micro-computer revolution. Computers and Society, 12(4), 16-18.
Kling, R. (1982). Reading list for computing, organizations, society. Computers and Society, 12(4), 24-25.
Kling, R. (1982). Social analyses of computing. Information Age, 4(1), 25-55.
Kling, R. (1982). Three syllabi for upper division undergraduate courses on the social issues and impacts of computing. Computers and Society, 12(4), 16-25.
Kling, R., Danziger, J., Dutton, W., & Kraemer, K. (1982). Computers and politics: High technology in American local governments. New York: Columbia University Press.
Kling, R., King, J., & Kraemer, K. (1982). Maintaining equity in EFT systems. In M.J. Ginzberg & C.A. Ross (Eds.), Proceedings of the third international conference on information systems (Ann Arbor, Michigan; December 13-15, 1982). Chicago: Society for Management Information Systems.
Kling, R., & Scacchi, W. (1982). The web of computing: Computer technology as social organization. Advances in Computers, 21, 1-90.
King, J. L., Kling, R., & Kraemer, K. L. (1983). Maintaining social equity in EFT. Information & Management, 6(3), 187.
Kling, R. (1983). Incorporating social values in the design of computer-based information systems. Information Resources Management, 1(3), 24-27.
Kling, R. (1983). Social goals in planning and development. In H. Otwayand & M. Peltu (Eds.), New office technologies: Human and organizational aspects (pp. 221-237). London: Francis Pinter Publishers.
Kling, R. (1983). Technology and society - a complex marriage. IEEE Spectrum, 20(11), 114.
Kling, R. (1983). Value conflicts in the deployment of computing applications: Cases in developed and developing countries. Telecommunications Policy, 7(1), 12-34.
Muellerglaser, K. D., Canzler, T., Kling, R., & Schulte, H. (1983). A 24-bit microprocessor for data communication-systems designed on the basis of a general cell library. Journal of Solid-State Circuits, 18(3), 250-261.
Iacono, S., & Kling, R. (1984). Office routine - the automated pink collar. IEEE Spectrum, 21(6), 73-76.
Kling, R. (1984). Assimilating social values in computer-based technologies. Telecommunications Policy, 8(2), 127-147.
Kling, R. (1984). The politics of efficiency: The mobilization of computing in complex organizations. In L. Maggi, J.L. King, & K.L. Kraemer (Eds.), Proceedings of the fifth international conference on information systems (Tuscon, AR; November 28-30, 1983), 19-20. New York: Society for Management Information Systems.
Kling, R. (1984). Value conflicts in public-oriented computing developments. The Information Society, 3(1), 1-38.
Kling, R. (1984). Value conflicts in public computing developments. The Information Society, 3(1), 1-38.
Kling, R., & Iacono, S. (1984). Computing as an occasion for social control. Journal of Social Issues, 40(3), 77-96.
Kling, R., & Iacono, S. (1984). The control of information systems development after implementation. Communications of the ACM, 27(12), 1218-1226.
Kling, R. (1985). Beyond mechanization: Work and technology in a post-industrial age [Book Review]. Science, 230(4729), 1031-1032.
Kling, R. (1985). Computerization as an ongoing social and political process. In Proceedings of the conference on development and use of computer-based systems and tools (Aarhus, Denmark), 309-328.
Kling, R. (1985). The rise of the computer state [Book Review]. Society, 22(2), 88-90.
Kling, R., & Kraemer, K. L. (1985). The political character of computerization in service organizations: Citizen’s interests or bureaucratic control. Computers and the Social Sciences, 1(2), 77-89.
Kling, R. (1986). The new wave of academic computing in colleges and universities. Outlook, 19(1/2), 8-14.
Kling, R., & Iacono, S. (1986). Printco case. In H. C. Lucas (Ed.), A casebook for management information systems (3rd ed.). New York: McGraw-Hill.
Kling, R. (1986). The struggle for democracy in an information society. The Information Society, 4(1/2), 1-7.
Iacono, S. & Kling, R. (1987). Changing office technologies and the transformation of clerical jobs. In R. Kraut (Ed.), Technology and the transformation of white collar work. Hillsdale: Lawrence Erlbaum.
Kling, R. (1987). Defining the boundaries of computing across complex organizations. In R. B. R. Hirschheim (Ed.), Critical issues in information systems (pp. 307-362). New York: John Wiley.
Kling, R. (1987). The social dimensions of computerization. Proceedings of the Association for Computing Machinery annual conference: Special interest group on computer-human interaction, 337-339. New York: ACM Press.
Kling, R. (1987, September 27). So many chips, so little time. [Review of the book The story of the information technology revolution]. New York Times Book Review, 43.
Kling, R., & Iacono, S. (1987). Why organizations adopt new technologies. In F. Williams (Ed.), Technology and communication behavior. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth Publishing Co.
Kling, R. (1988). Computer systems as institutions: Social dimensions of computing in organizations. In J.I. DeGross & M.H. Olson (Eds.) Proceedings of the ninth international conference on information systems (Minneapolis, MN; November 30-December 3, 1988), 101-110. Baltimore, MD: ACM Order Department.
Kling, R. (1988). Desktop computerization and the organization of work. Technologies de l’Information et Societie, 1(1), 57-90.
Kling, R., & Iacono, S. (1988). The mobilization of support for computerization: The role of computerization movements. Social Problems, 35(3), 226-243.
Kling, R. (1989). Adapting survey methods to study the social consequences of computerization: A response to Attewell and Rule based on five survey-based studies. In K. L. Kraemer, J. I. Cash & J. F. Nunamaker (Eds.), The information systems research challenge: Survey research methods: Vol. 33 (pp. 337-350). Boston, MA: Harvard Business School.
Kling, R. (1989). Theoretical perspectives in social analyses of computerization. In Z. Pylyshyn & L. Bannon (Eds.), Perspectives on the computer revolution (pp. 459-518). Norwood, NJ: Ablex Publishing Co.
Kling, R., & Iacono, S. (1989). The institutional character of computerized information systems. Office: Technology and People, 5(1), 7-28.
Kling, R., Lepore, S. J., Ianoco, S., & George, J. (1989). Implementing desktop computing, infrastructure, and quality of worklife. In J. DeGross, J.C. Henderson, & B.R. Konsynski, Proceedings of the tenth international conference on information systems (Boston, MA; December 4-6, 1989). Baltimore, MD: ACM Order Dept.
Kling, R. (1990). Information systems, social transformations, and quality of life. Proceedings of the conference on computers and the quality of life: Computers & Society, 20(3), 76-85. New York: ACM Press.
Kling, R. (1990). More information, better jobs? Occupational stratification and labor market segmentation in the United States’ information labor force. The Information Society, 7(2), 77-107.
Kling, R., George, J., & Iacono, S. (1990). The role of training and support in desktop computing. In K. M. Kaiser & H. J. Oppeland (Eds.), Desktop information technology: Organizational worklife in the 1990s. Amsterdam: Elesevier/North Holland.
Kling, R., & Iacono, S. (1990). Making the computer revolution. Journal of Computing and Society, 1(1), 43-58.
Kling, R., Iacono, S., & George, J. (1990). Occupational power, patterns of desktop computer use, and quality of work life. In K. M. Kaiser & H. J. Oppeland (Eds.), Desktop information technology: Proceedings of the International Federation for Information Processing WG 8.2 working conference on desktop information technology and organizational worklife in the 1990’s (Ithica, NY; July 2-4, 1989). Amsterdam; New York: Elsevier/North Holland.
Kling, R., & Jewett, T. (1990). The work group manager’s role in developing computing infrastructure. In R.B. Allen & F.H. Lochovsky (Eds.), Conference on office information systems (Cambridge, MA; April 25-27, 1990). New York, NY: Association for Computing Machinery.
Kling, R., Zmuidzinas, M., & George, J. (1990). Desktop computerization as a continuing process. In J. DeGross, M. Alavi & H.J. Oppelland, Proceedings of the eleventh international conference on information systems (Copenhagen, Denmark; December 16-19, 1990). New York: International Conference on Information Systems.
Kling, R. (1991). Reply to Woolgar and Grint: A preview. Science, Technology and Human Values, 16(3), 379-381.
Kling, R. (1991). When organizations are perpetrators: The conditions of computer abuse and computer crime. In R. Kling & C. Dunlop (Eds.), Computerization and controversy (pp. 676-692). San Diego, CA: Academic Press Professional, Inc.
Kling, R., & Dunlop, C. (Eds.). (1991). Computerization and controversy: Value conflicts and social choices. San Diego: Academic Press.
Kling, R., & Iacono, S. (1991). Computer based social movements. In J. Berleur, A. Clement, R. Sizer & D. Whitehouse (Eds.), The information society: Evolving landscapes (pp. 62-83). New York: Springer Verlag.
Kling, R., & Jewett, T. (1991). The dynamics of computerization in a social science research team: A case study of infrastructure, strategies, and skills. Social Science Computer Review, 9(2), 246-275.
Kling, R., Lepore, S. J., Iacono, S., & George, J. (1991). Control over desktop computing, infrastructure, and quality of work life. Journal of Information Technology Management, 2(2), 1-14.
Kling, R., Poster, M. a., & Olin, S. (1991). The emergence of postsuburbia. In R. Kling, M. Poster & S. Olin (Eds.), Postsuburban California: The transformation of postwar Orange County (pp. 1-30). Irvine, CA: University of California Press.
Kling, R., Poster, M., & Olin, S. (Eds.), (1991). Postsuburban California: The transformation of postwar Orange County. Irvine, CA: University of California Press.
Kling, R., & Turner, C. (1991). The structure of the information economy. In R. Kling, M. Poster & S. Olin (Eds.), Postsuburban California: The transformation of postwar Orange County (pp. 92-141). Irvine, CA: University of California Press.
Kling, R. (1992). Audiences, narratives and human values in social studies of science. Science, Technology and Human Values, 17(3), 349-365.
Kling, R. (1992). Behind the terminal: The critical role of computing infrastructure in effective information systems’ development and use. In W. Cotterman & J. Senn (Eds.), Challenges and strategies for research in systems development (pp. 153-201). New York: John Wiley.
Kling, R. (1992). Studies of computerization in social life: How genre conventions shape our discourse. Technologies de l’Information et Societie, 4(2), 205-237.
Kling, R. (1992). When gunfire shatters bone: Reducing sociotechnical systems to social relationships. Science, Technology and Human Values, 17(3), 381-385.
Kling, R., & Beuschel, W. (1992). How coordination processes influence CIM development ergonimics of hybrid automated systems. In P. Brödner & W. Karwowski (Eds.), Proceedings of the third international conference on human aspects of advanced manufacturing and hybrid automation: Ergonomics of hybrid automated systems (Gelsenkirchen, Germany; August 26-28, 1992). Amsterdam; New York: Elsevier.
Kling, R., Kraemer, K., Allen, J., Bakos, Y., Gurbaxani, V., & King, J. (1992). Information systems in manufacturing coordination: Economic and social perspectives. In J. DeGross, J.D. Becker, & J.J. Elam (Eds.), Proceedings of the thirteenth international conference on information systems (Dallas, TX; December 13-16, 1992). New York: ACM Press.
Kling, R., Scherson, I., & Allen, J. (1992). Massively parallel computing and information capitalism. In W.D. Hillis and J. Bailey (Ed.), A new era of computing (pp. 191-241). Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press.
Kling, R. (1993). Broadening computer science. Bulletin of the American Society for Information Science, 19(5), 12-13.
Kling, R. (1993, April). Computing for our future in a social world. Impact!, 24-26.
Kling, R. (1993). The current state of computer science. Bulletin of the American Society for Information Science, 19(5), 11-13.
Kling, R. (1993). Fair information practices with computer supported cooperative work. SIGOIS Bulletin, 14(1), 28-31.
Kling, R. (1993). Organizational analysis in computer science. The Information Society, 9(2), 71-87.
Kling, R. (1993). Organizational informatics. Bulletin of the American Society for Information Science, 19(5), 14-16.
Kling, R. (1993). Organizational informatics in computer science. Bulletin of the American Society for Information Science, 19(5), 11-18.
Kling, R., & Beuschel, W. (1993). Computerization and workplace transformations. In H. Luczak, A. Cakir, & G. Cakir (Eds.), Work with display units 92: Selected proceedings of the third international scientific conference on work with display units (Berlin, Germany; September 1-4, 1992), 395-399. Amsterdam; New York: North-Holland Press.
Kling, R., & Covi, L. (1993). Connections [Book Review]. The Information Society, 9(2).
Kling, R., & Dunlop, C. (1993). Controversies about computerization and the character of white collar worklife. The Information Society, 9(1), 1-29.
Kling, R., Wegner, P., Rice, J. R., & Weiss, E. A. (1993). Broadening computer-science. Communications of the ACM, 36(2), 15-20.
Kling, R. (1994). Beyond philia and phobia: Research on the psychological impact of technology. Computers and Society, 24(1), 7-8.
Kling, R. (1994). Constructing an analytical anthology: The case of computerization and controversy. Computers and Society, 24(1), 28-32.
Kling, R. (1994). Designing effective computing systems in a web of social and technical relations. Human-Computer Interaction, 9(1), 86-90.
Kling, R. (1994). Digital library design for organizational usability. SIGOIS Bulletin, 15(2), 59-70.
Kling, R. (1994). Introduction [Special issue: Social science perspectives on IS]. ACM Transactions on Information Systems, 12(2), 117-118.
Kling, R. (1994). Reading “all about” computerization: How genre conventions shape social analyses. The Information Society, 10(3), 147-172.
Kling, R. (1994). SIGCAS’ crisis and its role in advancing social analysis. Computers and Society, 24(1), 10-18.
Kling, R. (1994). Usability versus computability: Social analyses by computer scientists. In S. A. Katsikides (Ed.), Informatics, organization and society. Vienna-Munich: Oldenbourg Verlag, Reihe OCG, Austrian Computer Society.
Kling, R., & Elliott, M. (1994). Digital library design for organizational usability. In J.L. Schnase (Ed.), Proceedings of digital libraries ‘94: the first annual conference on the theory and practice of digital libraries (College Station, TX; June 19-24, 1994). College Station, TX: Hypermedia Research Laboratory, Dept. of Computer Science, Texas A&M University.
Kling, R., George, J. F., & Iacono, S. (1994). How do office workers learn about computing? Information Technology & People, 6(4), 249-269.
Kling, R., & Jewett, T. (1994). The social design of work life with computers and networks: An open natural systems perspective. Advances in Computers, 39, 239-293.
Kling, R., & Lamb, R. (1994). Before the computer: IBM, NCR, Burroughs, and Remington and the industry they created, 1865-1956 [Book Review]. Contemporary Sociology, 32(2), 302-303.
Kling, R., & Zmuidzinas, M. (1994). Technology, ideology, and social transformation: The case of computing and work organization. Revue International de Sociologie, 2(3), 28-56.
Kling, R. (1995). Controversies about electronic journals and scholarly communication: An introduction. The Information Society, 11(4), 243-246.
Kling, R. (1995). Digital library use in social context. SIGOIS Bulletin, 16(2), 17-18.
Kling, R. (1995). The electronic eye - the rise of the surveillance society [Book Review]. Contemporary Sociology, 24(4), 398-399.
Kling, R. (1995). Key social controversies about computerization and worklife. In R. Baecker, J. Grudin, W. A. Buxton & S. Greenberg (Eds.), Readings in human-computer interaction: Towards the year 2000. San Francisco, CA: Morgan-Kaufmann Publishers.
Kling, R. (1995). Organizational analysis and organizational informatics in computer science. In A. Kent & J. G. Williams (Eds.), Encyclopedia of computer science and technology: Vol. 33. New York: Marcel Dekke.
Kling, R., & Covi, L. (1995). Electronic journals and legitimate media in the systems of scholarly communication. The Information Society, 11(4), 261-271.
Kling, R., George, J., & Ianoco, S. (1995). Learning in context: Extensively computerized work groups as communities-of-practice. Accounting, Management and Information Technology, 5(3/4), 185-202.
Kling, R., & Iacono, S. (1995). Computerization movements and the mobilization of support for computerization. In S. L. Star (Ed.), Ecologies of knowledge: Work and politics in science and technology (pp. 119-153). New York: SUNY Press.
Kling, R., & Iacono, S. (1995). The mobilization of support for computerization: The role of computerization movements. In S. L. Star (Ed.), Ecologies of knowledge: Work and politics in science and technology (pp. 119-153). Albany, NY: SUNY Press.
Kling, R., Poster, M., & Olin, S. (1995). Beyond the edge: The dynamism of postsuburban regions. In R. Kling, M. Poster & S. Olin (Eds.), Postsuburban California: The transformation of postwar Orange County (pp. vii-xx). Irvine, CA: University of California Press.
Covi, L., & Kling, R. (1996). Organizational dimensions of effective digital library use: Closed rational and open natural systems models. Journal of the American Society for Information Science, 47(9), 672-689.
Kling, R. (1996). Being read in cyberspace: Boutique and mass media markets, intermediation, and the costs of on-line services. Communication Review, 1(3), 297-314.
Kling, R. (Ed.). (1996). Computerization and controversy: Value conflicts and social choices (2nd ed.). San Diego: Academic Press.
Kling, R. (1996). Computerization and controversy: Value conflicts and social choices. Journal of the American Society for Information Science, 47(12), 953-955.
Kling, R. (1996). Content and pedagogy in “teaching about the social aspects of computerization.” In Y. J. Katz, D. D. Millin & B. Offir (Eds.), The impact of information technology: From practice to curriculum. London; New York: Chapman & Hall Pub Company.
Kling, R. (1996). Does technology drive history? The dilemma of technological determinism, by Smith and Marx [Book Review]. The Information Society, 12(1), 100-102.
Kling, R. (1996). Does technology drive history? The dilemma of technological determinism [Book Review]. Information Processing & Management, 32(3), 392-393.
Kling, R. (1996). Institutional processes in the diffusion, use and impacts of information technology. In R. Belk, N. Dohlakia & A. Venkatesh (Eds.), Consumption and marketing: Macro dimensions (pp. 347-356). Cincinnati, OH: South-Western College Publishing Company.
Kling, R. (1996). Synergies and competition between life in cyberspace and face-to-face communities. Social Science Computer Review, 14(1), 50-54.
Kling, R., Ackerman, M., & Allen, J. P. (1996). Information entrepreneurialism, information technologies, and the continuing vulnerability to privacy. In R. Kling (Ed.), Computerization and controversy: Value conflicts and social choices (2nd ed.) (pp. 727-743). San Diego: Academic Press.
Kling, R., & Allen, J. P. (1996). How the marriage of management and computing intensifies the struggle for personal privacy. In D. Lyon & E. Zureik (Eds.), Computers, Surveillance, and Privacy (pp. 104-131). Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
Kling, R., & Iacono, S. (1996). Computerization movements and tales of technological utopianism. In R. Kling (Ed.), Computerization and controversy: Value conflicts and social choices (2nd ed.). San Diego: Academic Press.
Kling, R., & Lamb, R. (1996). Analyzing visions of electronic publishing and digital libraries. In G. B. Newby & R. M. Peek (Eds.), Scholarly publishing: The electronic frontier. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press.
Kling, R., & Lamb, R. (1996). Bits of cities: Utopian visions and social power in placed-based and electronic communities. Bloomington, IN: Center for Social Informatics.
Covi, L., & Kling, R. (1997). Digital shift or digital drift? Conceptualizing transitions from paper media to electronic publishing and digital libraries in north american universities. Bloomington, IN: Center for Social Informatics.
Elliott, M., & Kling, R. (1997). Organizational usability of digital libraries: Case study of legal research in civil and criminal courts. Journal of the American Society for Information Science, 48(11), 1023-1035.
Kling, R. (1997). Computers, ethics, and social values. Minds and Machines: Journal of Artificial Intelligence, Philosophy and Cognitive Science, 9(1), 127-130.
Kling, R. (1997). Coordination, control, and the intranet. In S. Kiesler (Ed.), The culture of the internet. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
Kling, R. (1997). The culture of cyberspace: The internet for sociologists. Contemporary Sociology, 26(4), 434.
Kling, R. (1997). The internet for sociologists. Bloomington, IN: Center for Social Informatics.
Kling, R. (1997). Letter from the Editor-in-Chief [Special issue: Free speech and privacy in Canada’s information society]. The Information Society, 13(2), III-IV.
Kling, R. (1997). Letter from the Editor-in-Chief [Special issue: Social identity and computer networks]. The Information Society, 13(4), III-IV.
Kling, R. (1997). Reading “all about” computerization: How genre conventions shape social analyses. In P. Agre & D. Schuler (Eds.), Reinventing technology, rediscovering community: Critical explorations of computing as a social practice (pp. 19-46). Greenwich, CT: Ablex.
Kling, R., & Covi, L. (1997). Digital libraries and the practices of scholarly communication (No. WP-97-03). Bloomington, IN: Center for Social Informatics.
Kling, R., & Lamb, R. (1997). Bits of cities: How utopian visions structure social power in physical space and cyberspace. In E. E. Presses (Ed.), Urban powers and utopias in the world. Universitaires du Mirail: Emmanuel Eveno Presses.
Kling, R., & McKim, G. (1997). A typology for electronic-journals: Characterizing scholarly journals by their distribution forms (No. WP-97-07). Bloomington, IN: Center for Social Informatics.
Kling, R., & Star, L. (1997). Human centered systems in the perspective of organizational and social informatics (Chapter 5). In T. Huang & J.L. Flanagan (Eds.), Human centered systems: Information, interactivity and intelligence: Final report (Arlington, VA; July 15, 1997). Illinois: University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
Kling, R., & Star, L. (1997 May). Human centered systems in the perspective of organizational and social informatics. Bloomington, IN: Center for Social Informatics.
Kling, R., & Star, S. L. (1997). NSF workshop group: Scope and recommendations. IEEE Computer Graphics and Applications, 17(4), 22-24.
Allen, J., Bakos, Y., & Kling, R. (1998). Sustaining new coordination method: The case of world class manufacturing (No. 98-06). Bloomington, IN: Center for Social Informatics.
Covi, L., & Kling, R. (1998). Shift or drift? A closer look at university decision-making concerning the transition from paper to digital libraries. In M. Wolf, P. Ensor & M. A. Thomas (Eds.), Information imagineering: Meeting at the interface. Chicago: ALA Press.
Kling, R. (1998). A brief introduction to social informatics. Canadian Journal of Information and Library Science - Revue Canadienne des Sciences de l’Information et de Bibliotheconomie, 23(1-2), 50-85.
Kling, R. (1998). Letter from the Editor-in-Chief. The Information Society, 14(1), 1-2.
Kling, R. (1998). Letter from the Editor-in-Chief. The Information Society, 14(3), 169-170.
Kling, R. (1998). Letter from the Editor-in-Chief. The Information Society, 14(4), 251-252.
Kling, R. (1998). Letter from the Editor-in-Chief [Special issue: Virtual societies]. Information Society, 14(2), 67-69.
Kling, R., & McKim, G. (1998). The shaping of electronic media in supporting scientific communication: The contribution of social informatics. In J. Meadows & H.D. Bocker (Eds.), Electronic communication and research in Europe: A conference organized by Academia Europaea (Darmstadt; April 15-17, 1998). Luxembourg : Office for Official Publications of the European Communities.
Kling, R., Rosenbaum, H., & Hert, C. (1998). Social informatics in information science: An introduction. Journal of the American Society for Information Science, 49(12), 1047-1052.
Kling, R., & Star, S. L. (1998). Human centered systems in the perspective of organizational and social informatics. Computers and Society, 28(1), 22-29.
Kling, R., & Tillquist, J. (1998). Conceiving IT-enabled organizational change (No. WP-98-02). Bloomington, IN: Center for Social Informatics.
Hara, N., & Kling, R. (1999). Students’ frustrations with a web-based distance education course. First Monday, 4(12).
Hara, N., & Kling, R. (1999). Students’ frustrations with a web-based distance education course: A taboo topic in the discourse (No. WP 99-01-C1). Bloomington, IN: Center for Social Informatics.
Kling, R. (1999). Can the “next generation internet” effectively support “ordinary citizens”? The Information Society, 15(1), 57-63.
Kling, R. (1999). IT and organizational change in digital economies: A socio-technical approach. Computers and Society, 29(3), 17-25.
Kling, R. (1999). Letter from the editor-in-chief. The Information Society, 15(1), I-II.
Kling, R. (1999). Letter from the editor-in-chief. The Information Society, 15(2), 69-70.
Kling, R. (1999). Letter from the editor-in-chief. The Information Society, 15(4), 211-212.
Kling, R. (1999, Nov 24). Post-suburbia defies tidy mapping. Newsday, 47-48.
Kling, R. (1999). Trapped in the net: The unanticipated consequences of computerization. American Journal of Sociology, 104(4), 1208-1210.
Kling, R. (1999). What is social informatics and why does it matter? D-Lib Magazine, 5(1).
Kling, R., & Crawford, H. (1999). From retrieval to communication: The development, use and consequences of digital documentary systems. Journal of the American Society for Information Science, 50(12), 1121-1122.
Kling, R., Lee, Y. C., Teich, A., & Frankel, M. S. (1999). Assessing anonymous communication on the internet: Policy deliberations. The Information Society, 15(2), 79-90.
Kling, R., & McKim, G. (1999). Not just a matter of time: Field differences in the shaping of electronic media (No. WP-99-02). Bloomington, IN: Center for Social Informatics.
Kling, R., & McKim, G. (1999). Scholarly communication and the continuum of electronic publishing. Journal of the American Society for Information Science, 50(10), 890-906.
Teich, A., Frankel, M. S., Kling, R., & Lee, Y. C. (1999). Anonymous communication policies for the internet: Results and recommendations of the AAAS conference. The Information Society, 15(2), 71-77.
Hara, N., & Kling, R. (2000). Students’ distress with a web-based distance education course. Information, Communication & Society, 3(4), 557-579.
Kling, R. (2000). Information technologies and the strategic reconfiguration of libraries in communication networks (No. WP-00-04). Bloomington, IN: Center for Social Informatics.
Kling, R. (2000). Learning about information technologies and social change: The contribution of social informatics. The Information Society, 16(3), 217-232.
Kling, R. (2000). Letter from the editor-in-chief. The Information Society, 16(1), 1-3.
Kling, R. (2000). Letter from the editor-in-chief. The Information Society, 16(3), 167-168.
Kling, R. (2000). Social informatics: A new perspective on social research about information and communication technologies. Prometheus, 18(3), 245-264.
Kling, R., & Hara, N. (2000). Students’ distress with a web-based distance education course: An ethnographic study of participants’ experiences (No. WP 00-01-B1). Bloomington, IN: Center for Social Informatics.
Kling, R., & McKim, G. (2000). Not just a matter of time: Field differences and the shaping of electronic media in supporting scientific communication. Journal of the American Society for Information Science, 51(14), 1306-1320.
King, A. B., & Kling, R. (2001). Valuing technology: Organizations, culture, and change. American Journal of Sociology, 107(2), 533-535.
Kling, R. (2001). The internet and the strategic reconfiguration of libraries. Library Administration and Management, 15(3), 16-23.
Kling, R., & Callahan, E. (2001). Electronic journals, the internet, and scholarly communication (No. WP- 01-04). Bloomington, IN: Center for Social Informatics.
Kling, R., Fortuna, J., & King, A. (2001). The remarkable transformation of E-Biomed into PubMed central (No. WP- 01-03). Bloomington, IN: Center for Social Informatics.
Kling, R., Kraemer, K. L., Allen, J. P., Bakos, Y., Gurbaxani, V., & Elliott, M. (2001). Transforming coordination: The promise and problems of information technology in coordination. In T. Malone, G. Olson & J. Smith (Eds.), Coordination theory and collaboration technology. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum.
Kling, R., & Iacono, S. (2001). Computerizaton movements: The rise of the internet and distant forms of work. In J. Yates & J. V. Maanan (Eds.), Information technology and organizational transformation: History, rhetoric, and practice (pp. 93-136). Thousand Oakes, CA: Sage Publications.
Kling, R., McKim, G., & King, A. (2001). A bit more to it: Scholarly communication forums as socio-technical interaction networks (No. WP-01-02). Bloomington, IN: Center for Social Informatics.
Hara, N. & Kling, R. (2002). Communities of practice with and without information technology. In E.M. Rasmussen, & E. Toms, American Society of Information Science and Technology 2002: Information, connections and community (Philadelphia, PA; November 18-21, 2002), 39, 338-349. Medford, NJ: Information Today, Inc.
Kling, R. (2002). Critical professional discourses about information and communications technologies and social life in the U.S. In K. Brunnstein & J. Berleur (Eds.), Human choice and computers: Issues of choice and quality of life in the information society: International Federation for Information Processing 17th world computer conference (Montreal, Quebec; August 25-30, 2002), 1-20. Boston: Kluwer Academic Publishers.
Kling, R. (2002). Critical professional education about information and communications technologies and social life (No. WP-02-06). Bloomington, IN: Center for Social Informatics.
Kling, R. (2002). The internet galaxy: Reflections on the internet, business, and society. Academe-Bulletin of the American Association of University Professors, 88(4), 66-68.
Kling, R. (2002). Untitled. The Information Society, 18(1), I-II.
Kling, R. (2002). Untitled. The Information Society, 18(3), 147-149.
Kling, R., & Courtright, C. (2002). Group behavior and learning in electronic forums: A socio-technical approach (No. WP- 02-09). Bloomington, IN: Center for Social Informatics.
Kling, R., & Hara, N. (2002). Informatics and distributed learning (No. WP- 02-05). Bloomington, IN: Center for Social Informatics.
Kling, R., & Hara, N. (2002). IT supports for communities of practice: An empirically-based framework (No. WP- 02-02). Bloomington, IN: Center for Social Informatics.
Kling, R., & Lamb, R. (2002). From users to social actors: Reconceptualizing socially rich interaction through information and communication technology (No. WP- 02-11). Bloomington, IN: Center for Social Informatics.
Kling, R., & Meyer, E. T. (2002). Leveling the playing field, or expanding the bleachers? Socio-technical interaction networks and arXiv.org (No. WP- 02-10). Bloomington, IN: Center for Social Informatics.
Kling, R., & Spector, L. (2002). Academic rewards for scholarly research communication via electronic publishing (No. WP- 02-13). Bloomington, IN: Center for Social Informatics.
Kling, R., Spector, L., & McKim, G. (2002). Locally controlled scholarly publishing via the internet: The guild model. In E.M. Rasmussen, & E. Toms, American Society of Information Science and Technology 2002: Information, connections and community (Philadelphia, PA; November 18-21, 2002). Medford, NJ: Information Today, Inc.
Kling, R., Spector, L., & McKim, G. (2002). Locally controlled scholarly publishing via the internet: The guild model (No. WP- 02-01). Bloomington, IN: Center for Social Informatics.
Kling, R., Spector, L., & McKim, G. (2002). Locally controlled scholarly publishing via the internet: The guild model. Journal of Electronic Publishing, 8(1).
Kling, R., & Swygard-Hobaugh, A. J. (2002). The internet and the velocity of scholarly journal publishing (No. WP- 02-12). Bloomington, IN: Center for Social Informatics.
Kling, R. (2003). Critical professional education about information and communications technologies and social life. Information Technology & People, 16(4), 394-418.
Kling, R. (2003). The internet and unrefereed scholarly publishing (No. WP- 03-01). Bloomington, IN: Center for Social Informatics.
Kling, R. (2003). Power issues in knowledge management (No. WP- 03-02). Bloomington, IN: Center for Social Informatics.
Kling, R. (2003). Social informatics. In A. Kent, H. Lancour, W. Z. Nasri & J. E. Daily (Eds.), Encyclopedia of library and information science. New York: Marcel Dekker, Inc.
Kling, R., & Callahan, E. (2003). Electronic journals, the internet, and scholarly communication. In B. Cronin & D. Shaw (Eds.), Annual review of information science and technology, 37, 127-177. Medford, NJ: InformationToday, Inc.
Kling, R., & Courtright, C. (2003). Group behavior and learning in electronic forums: A Socio-technical approach. In S. Barab & R. Kling (Eds.), Designing for virtual communities in the service of learning. Cambridge, MA: Cambridge University Press.
Kling, R., & Courtright, C. (2003). Group behavior and learning in electronic forums: A sociotechnical approach. The Information Society, 19(3), 221-235.
Kling, R., & Kraemer, K. L. (2003). Letter from the Editor-in-Chief [Special issue: Globalization of electronic commerce]. The Information Society, 19(1), 1-3.
Kling, R., McKim, G., & King, A. (2003). A bit more to it: Scholarly communication forums as socio-technical interaction networks. Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology, 54(1), 47-67.
Lamb, R., King, J. L., & Kling, R. (2003). Informational environments: Organizational contexts of online information use. Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology, 54(2), 97-114.
Lamb, R., & Kling, R. (2003). Reconceptualizing users as social actors in information systems research. MIS Quarterly, 27(2), 197-235.
Barab, S., Kling, R., & Gray, J. (2004). Building online communities in the service of learning. Cambridge, MA: Cambridge University Press.
Kling, R., Spector, L. B., & Fortuna, J. (2004). The real stakes of virtual publishing: The transformation of E-Biomed into PubMed central. Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology, 55(2), 127-148.
