Engaging with change: Information and communication technology professionals' perspectives on change in the context of the 'Brexit' vote.

Information and Communication Technology (ICT) has been a key agent of change in the 21st century. Given the role of ICT in changing society this research sought to explore the responses and attitudes to change from ICT professionals and ICT academics in dealing with the potentially far reaching pol...

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Main Authors: Elizabeth Lomas, Julie McLeod
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5695584?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-dc70a896eb1c49da9bc51f5be4489d3f2020-11-25T02:47:44ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-011211e018645210.1371/journal.pone.0186452Engaging with change: Information and communication technology professionals' perspectives on change in the context of the 'Brexit' vote.Elizabeth LomasJulie McLeodInformation and Communication Technology (ICT) has been a key agent of change in the 21st century. Given the role of ICT in changing society this research sought to explore the responses and attitudes to change from ICT professionals and ICT academics in dealing with the potentially far reaching political challenge triggered by the UK's 2016 European Union Referendum and its decision to leave the European Union (referred to as Brexit). Whilst the vote was a UK based decision its ramifications have global implications and as such the research was not confined to the UK.Data was collected through a survey launched on the first working day after the Brexit referendum vote to leave the EU and kept open for four weeks. The survey contained qualitative and quantitative questions. It sought to understand the opportunities and threats that would exist post-Brexit for ICT professionals and academics triggered by the decision. The research captured a complex rich picture on ICT professionals' responses to the potential challenge of change triggered by the Brexit vote. Immediately after the Brexit decision the research reveals uncertainties amongst ICT professionals regarding what the decision would mean, with just under half of the participants not identifying any opportunities or threats. For those who did, threats outweighed opportunities by just more than double. Whilst understanding the global possibilities and dangers, participants saw their position from national and organizational perspectives. The highest frequency coded threats related to areas outside the participants' control and the highest frequency opportunities related to areas where there was the potential for ICT interventions. This survey is part of longitudinal piece of research. Using the same methodological approach two further surveys are planned. The second survey will be one year after Article 50 was triggered on 29 March 2017. The final survey will be one year after the UK exit from the EU, assuming this occurs.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5695584?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Elizabeth Lomas
Julie McLeod
spellingShingle Elizabeth Lomas
Julie McLeod
Engaging with change: Information and communication technology professionals' perspectives on change in the context of the 'Brexit' vote.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Elizabeth Lomas
Julie McLeod
author_sort Elizabeth Lomas
title Engaging with change: Information and communication technology professionals' perspectives on change in the context of the 'Brexit' vote.
title_short Engaging with change: Information and communication technology professionals' perspectives on change in the context of the 'Brexit' vote.
title_full Engaging with change: Information and communication technology professionals' perspectives on change in the context of the 'Brexit' vote.
title_fullStr Engaging with change: Information and communication technology professionals' perspectives on change in the context of the 'Brexit' vote.
title_full_unstemmed Engaging with change: Information and communication technology professionals' perspectives on change in the context of the 'Brexit' vote.
title_sort engaging with change: information and communication technology professionals' perspectives on change in the context of the 'brexit' vote.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Information and Communication Technology (ICT) has been a key agent of change in the 21st century. Given the role of ICT in changing society this research sought to explore the responses and attitudes to change from ICT professionals and ICT academics in dealing with the potentially far reaching political challenge triggered by the UK's 2016 European Union Referendum and its decision to leave the European Union (referred to as Brexit). Whilst the vote was a UK based decision its ramifications have global implications and as such the research was not confined to the UK.Data was collected through a survey launched on the first working day after the Brexit referendum vote to leave the EU and kept open for four weeks. The survey contained qualitative and quantitative questions. It sought to understand the opportunities and threats that would exist post-Brexit for ICT professionals and academics triggered by the decision. The research captured a complex rich picture on ICT professionals' responses to the potential challenge of change triggered by the Brexit vote. Immediately after the Brexit decision the research reveals uncertainties amongst ICT professionals regarding what the decision would mean, with just under half of the participants not identifying any opportunities or threats. For those who did, threats outweighed opportunities by just more than double. Whilst understanding the global possibilities and dangers, participants saw their position from national and organizational perspectives. The highest frequency coded threats related to areas outside the participants' control and the highest frequency opportunities related to areas where there was the potential for ICT interventions. This survey is part of longitudinal piece of research. Using the same methodological approach two further surveys are planned. The second survey will be one year after Article 50 was triggered on 29 March 2017. The final survey will be one year after the UK exit from the EU, assuming this occurs.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5695584?pdf=render
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