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Chen, Y, Chen, Y, Smyth, H and Fu, Y (2021) Enforcement against contract violation in Chinese construction projects: impacts of trust and perceived intentionality. Construction Management and Economics, 39(08), 687–703.

Dhanshyam, M and Srivastava, S K (2021) Governance structures for public infrastructure projects: Public–private management regimes, contractual forms and innovation. Construction Management and Economics, 39(08), 652–68.

Geekiyanage, D and Ramachandra, T (2021) Running costs indices for commercial buildings using the hedonic price imputation approach: a case of Sri Lanka. Construction Management and Economics, 39(08), 704–21.

Sage, D, Vitry, C, Dainty, A and Barnard, S (2021) Towards a new theory of construction innovation: a socio-material analysis of classification work. Construction Management and Economics, 39(08), 637–51.

  • Type: Journal Article
  • Keywords: Innovation; actor network theory; communication;
  • ISBN/ISSN: 0144-6193
  • URL: https://doi.org/10.1080/01446193.2021.1938160
  • Abstract:
    There has been a longstanding concern among construction scholars and practitioners in classifying construction innovations, whether as “incremental” or “radical,” “technological” or “organizational,” “product” or “process”. In this paper we extend this interest in classification to examine what classification work accomplishes within construction innovation practices. Instead of addressing the validity of innovation categories as objective representations we explore how innovations are classified within everyday interactions that shape how they proliferate. Our approach is informed by socio-material theories of classification, communication and innovation, particularly those from Actor-Network Theory (ANT) and Ventriloquial Analysis (VA). Empirically, our approach is developed through an analysis of how a single innovation – a large format concrete block – was classified within a single warranty approval meeting as it entered the UK housing market. Our analysis explains how such classification work is dynamically constituted by formal and informal classificatory acts that involve displacements of human agency that shape how construction innovations proliferate. Classification work is thus shown to make a vital difference to how construction innovation is accomplished and can be understood.

Zhang, R P, Holdsworth, S, Turner, M and Andamon, M M (2021) Does gender really matter? A closer look at early career women in construction. Construction Management and Economics, 39(08), 669–86.