Lucas D. Introna (born 1961) is Professor of Organisation, Technology and Ethics at the Lancaster University Management School.
Early on in his career Introna was concerned with the way managers incorporated information in support of managerial practices (such as planning, decision-making, etc.).
In this work he provided an account of the manager as an always already involved and entangled actor (which is always to a greater or lesser extent already compromised and configured) in contrast to the traditional normative model of the manager as a rational objective free agent that can choose to act or not act in particular ways.
His recent work focuses on the ethical and political aspects of technology as well as making contribution to a field that has become known as sociomateriality.
More recently Introna has suggested that if we are cyborgs, as argued by Donna Haraway and others, then our ethical relationships with the inanimate material world needs to be reconsidered in a fundamental way.