In 2019, he was elected to the Polish Academy of Sciences, as the youngest member in social sciences and humanities in history,[4] and in 2022 he became its youngest vice-president.[1] Since 2016 he is a faculty associate at the
Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society at
Harvard University.
Since 2011, Jemielniak has been a non-paid member of the board of the
Copernicus Science Centre in Warsaw.[11] Since 2002 he has been a non-paid program board member at Nida Foundation, supporting English education of teachers in small towns and villages.[12] Since 2016, he has been supporting the
Equality Parade (Warsaw) and has been the honorary committee member.[13] In 1998–2004, he was an ED of
Collegium Invisibile, one of several non-profits created by the
Open Society Foundations to foster social sciences and humanities excellence in post-Soviet regions.
He has researched and published books in the field of work-space studies about
IT professionals[14][15] and other
knowledge workers.[16] He has also published articles on organisational changes in higher education facilities[17] and is an active participant in the debate on the reform of higher education in Poland.[18][19][20][21] An experienced ethnographer and digital ethnographer, more recently he has been doing social data science, and advocating mixing digital ethnography with data science. He devised a mixed-method of
Thick Big Data, described in a book published in 2020 by
Oxford University Press.[22]
Wikimedia
Within the Wikimedia movement, Jemielniak is involved in the
Polish Wikipedia, where he has served in various roles, including as an administrator, bureaucrat and check-user.[23] He was also a steward for all Wikimedia projects.[23] He is a member of the
Polish chapter of Wikimedia, but has never held any roles or position in it.
Dariusz has voiced his support for the enabling of
paid editing of Wikipedia under certain constraints,[23] and has been vocal about reducing the bureaucracy within projects.[24][25] He is an advocate of wider involvement of women and academics in the Wikimedia movement,[26][27][28][29] and the need to start actively promoting its use and development in academia.[30]
From 2003 to 2015, he founded, developed, and sold ling.pl, the largest online dictionary in Poland.[42] In 2013 he co-founded InstaLing, a free educational platform for language educators used by over 200 thousand people.[43] Since 2016, he has been a board member and a vice-chair of Escola S.A.,[44] a public traded company developing mobile apps and one of 100 fastest growing companies according to Clutch[45] and
Financial Times.[46]
Jemielniak, Dariusz and Kociatkiewicz, Jerzy (ed.) (2009), Handbook of Research on Knowledge-Intensive Organizations, Hershey-New York: Information Science Reference,
ISBN978-1-60566-176-6.
Jemielniak, Dariusz and Marks, Abigail (ed.) (2012), Managing Dynamic Technology-Oriented Businesses: High-Tech Organizations and Workplaces, Hershey-New York: Information Science Reference,
ISBN978-1-4666-1836-7.
Koźmiński, Andrzej K. and Jemielniak, Dariusz (2013) The New Principles of Management, Frankfurt – New York – Oxford:
Peter Lang,
ISBN978-3-631-64252-8.
Koźmiński, Andrzej K., Jemielniak, Dariusz, Jendrych, Elżbieta, and Wiśniewska, Halina (2014) Management matters, Warszawa:
Wolters KluwerISBN9788326431807.
Jemielniak, Dariusz (ed.) (2014) Legal Professions at the Crossroads, New York: Peter Lang
ISBN978-3-631-64385-3.
^Collins, Samuel Gerald (July 2015). "Common Knowledge? An Ethnography of Wikipedia by Dariusz Jemielniak. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2014". Anthropology of Work Review. 36 (1): 47–48.
doi:
10.1111/awr.12062.
^Bourne, Dorota Joanna (2016). "All That We Know Dariusz Jemielniak Common knowledge? An ethnography of Wikipedia. (Stanford University Press 2014)". European Management Review. 13 (1): 69–72.
doi:
10.1111/emre.12067.
ISSN1740-4762.
S2CID147155614.