INTELLECTUAL AGENDA Difference is not the absence of sameness. My intellectual agenda stems from a positive view of difference. Rather than constituting difference negatively, as lack, as foreignness or as an impenetrable otherness, in my research difference is viewed as generative. Difference diffracts patterns observed elsewhere and by doing so generates new ones. In a world where lived experiences are shaped through material intra-actions, constituting directional social processes; I am interested in the diffractions of those processes produced by material differences. I explore how people intra-act with the diverse materiality of their world in ways that produce multiplicity of becomings. Conversely, I am also concerned with acts that reproduce sameness or produce marginality. EMPIRICAL AGENDA The site of differences for my research is the African continent. Using notions from sociomateriality, feminist theory, practice and process studies I look to cast light on digital phenomena as they unfold in Africa. Whereas digital phenomena are studied extensively in resource rich and high-tech settings, I look to expand our understanding of such phenomena by positioning them in Africa. I study how patterns observed elsewhere are diffracted locally. Due to a range of reasons such as climate (e.g. humidity, dust, etc.), infrastructure, skills, security; technologies tend to materialize differently in Africa. Consequently, material differences are diffracted into unfamiliar manifestations of digital processes (e.g. digital transformation, innovation, future of work, or energy transition). My empirical agenda is concerned with documenting those manifestations and expanding theoretical understandings so that they encompass the empirical realities encountered in Africa. IMPACT AGENDA In a world faced with multiple global challenges, stemming from a severe environmental crisis, we are tempted to look for radical and unconventional material solutions. By studying the diffractions of organizational phenomena within the African setting, I seek out global lessons about enduring local sociomaterial approaches to challenges. Conversely, the translation of established global best practices to African settings is also within the scope of the impact generated through my research. Last but not least, through my work I look to strengthen plurality within the management discipline and positive views of difference. Anchored strongly within Western ways of organizing and led by academics from Western universities, the management discipline can overlook the fact that for the most part organizing in the contemporary world happens in non-Western settings. I believe that our theories and our curriculums need to reflect this. Through my scholarship I look to legitimize findings from African settings as theory-building and to re-construct them as non-marginal for the discipline.
Dr Mira Slavova holds a PhD from the Judge Business School, University of Cambridge. She works on topics linking the fields of Information Systems and Organisation Theory. The prevailing focus of her research is on the sociomateriality of information and communication technologies. Mira's work spans the boundary between academic and applied research, pursuing not only intellectual rigor but also meaningful impact. Mira is passionate about exploring digitisation and organisations in African settings (e.g. Liberia, Ghana, South Africa). She has held positions at the International Food Policy Research Institute (Washington, DC), SAP Africa Innovation Center (South Africa) and Gordon Institute of Business Science (University of Pretoria). Prior to joining WBS, Mira has taught at ESSEC Business School (Paris) and London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE).
- Slavova, Mira, Metiu, Anca, 2022. Relational work and the knowledge transfer process : rituals in rural Ghana. Organization Science, 33 (1), pp. 332-352
- Constantinides, Panos, Slavova, Mira, 2020. From a monopoly to an entrepreneurial field : the constitution of possibilities in South African energy. Journal of Business Venturing, 35 (6)
- Karanasios, Stan, Slavova, Mira, 2019. How do development actors do ?ICT for development?? A strategy-as-practice perspective on emerging practices in Ghanaian agriculture. Information Systems Journal, 29 (4), pp. 888-913
- Slavova, Mira, Karanasios, Stan, 2018. When institutional logics meet information and communication technologies : examining hybrid information practices in Ghana's agriculture. Journal of the Association for Information Systems, 19 (9), pp. 775-812
- Slavova, Mira, Okwechime, Ekene, 2016. African smart cities strategies for Agenda 2063. Africa Journal of Management, 2 (2), pp. 210-229
- Allen, David K., Karanasios, Stan, Slavova, Mira, 2011. Working with activity theory : context, technology, and information behavior. Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology, 62 (4), pp. 776-788
- Karanasios, Stan, Slavova, Mira, 2018. Understanding the impacts of mobile technology on smallholder agriculture. In Duncombe, R. (ed.), Digital Technologies for Agricultural and Rural Development in the Global South, CABI, pp. 111-122
- Barrett, Michael, Slavova, Mira, 2017. Making ICT infrastructure, appliances, and services more accessible and affordable in rural areas. In ICT in Agriculture (Updated Edition): Connecting Smallholders to Knowledge, Networks, and Institutions, Washington, DC, World Bank, pp. 15-48
- Slavova, Mira, Constantinides, P., 2017. Digital infrastructures as platforms : the case of smart electricity grids. European Conference of Information Systems, Guimarães, Portugal, 5-10 June 2017, Published in Proceedings of the 25th European Conference on Information Systems (ECIS), pp. 1217-1231
- Slavova, Mira, 2017. Smart cities and smart grids : a vision for South Africa. Gordon Institute of Business Science, University of Pretoria, Digital Disruption program
- Slavova, Mira, 2017. Internet of Things : extracting business value in South Africa. Gordon Institute of Business Science, University of Pretoria, Digital Disruption program
- Slavova, Mira, 2017. Transforming South African industry : IoT in mining, automotive and insurance sectors. Gordon Institute of Business Science, University of Pretoria, Digital Disruption program
- Slavova, Mira, Metiu, Anca, 2015. Ritualization and the process of knowledge transfer. ESSEC Working paper, Document de Recherche ESSEC / Centre de recherche de l'ESSEC
- Slavova, Mira, Heuër, Amélie, Agster, Rainer, 2015. Growing green and inclusive entrepreneurship for sustainable development in South Africa. SEED c/o adelphi research gGmbH
- Kolavalli, Shashidhara, Robinson, Elizabeth J. Z., Diao, Xinshen, Alpuerto, Vida, Folledo, Renato, Slavova, Mira, Ngeleza, Guyslain K., Asante, Felix Ankomah, 2012. Economic transformation in Ghana : where will the path lead?. International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI)