1st Edition

Technocracy Knowledge and Power in the Information Age

By Paul O'Connor Copyright 2026
220 Pages
by Routledge

220 Pages
by Routledge

220 Pages
by Routledge

In what is routinely described as a ‘knowledge society’, this book argues that contemporary knowledge is systematically filtered and distorted by the requirements of the bureaucratic-managerial organisations that constitute the structural core of hypermodernity. As knowledge becomes increasingly politicised, almost every ‘fact’ with which we are presented serves an agenda. This book traces... Read more

Introduction  1. The Codetermination of Knowledge and Social Organisation  2. The Growth of Formal Organisation  3. The Ascendance of Technique  4. Managerial Subjectification and Knowledge  5. Detachment and Instrumentalism  6. Problematisation and Parasitism  7. Informationalisation  8. Domains of Equivalence  9. Quasi-Objects and their Institutionalisations  Conclusion: Beyond the Second Reality

 

 

Biography

Paul O’Connor is Associate Professor of Sociology at United Arab Emirates University in Abu Dhabi. He is the author of Home: The Foundations of Belonging and the co-editor of The Technologisation of the Social: A Political Anthropology of the Digital Machine, Liminal Politics in the New Age of Disease: Technocratic Mimetism, and the Elgar Encyclopedia of Political Anthropology.