Suchman, Lucy2020-06-062020-06-0619931993http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF00749015https://dl.eusset.eu/handle/20.500.12015/3435Drawing on writings within the CSCW community and on recent social theory, this paper proposes that the adoption of speech act theory as a foundation for system design carries with it an agenda of discipline and control over organization members' actions. I begin with a brief review of the language/action perspective introduced by Winograd, Flores and their colleagues, focusing in particular on the categorization of speakers' intent. I then turn to some observations on the politics of categorization and, with that framework as back-ground, consider the attempt, through the coordinator , to implement a technological system for intention-accounting within organizations. Finally, I suggest the implications of the analysis presented in the paper for the politics of CSCW systems design.Coordination technologiesorganizational communicationsspeech act theorysystems designDo categories have politics?Text/Journal Article10.1007/BF007490151573-7551