“Think of it as Money”: A History of the VISA Payment System, 1970–1984
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Date
2007Author
Stearns, David L
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Abstract
This dissertation is a historical case study of the payment system designed, built, and operated
by Visa International Services Association (VISA, hereafter “Visa”). The system is analyzed as
a sociotechnical one, consisting of both social and technical elements that mutually constitute
and shape one another. The historical narrative concentrates on the period of 1970 to 1984,
which roughly corresponds to the tenure of the system’s founder and first CEO, Dee Ward
Hock. It also focuses primarily upon the events that took place within the United States.
After establishing a theoretical and historical context, I describe why and how the organization
now known as Visa was formed. I then explain how the founder and his staff transformed
the disintegrated, paper-based credit card systems of the 1960s into the unified, electronic value
exchange system we know today. Special attention is paid throughout this narrative to the ways
in which the technologies were shaped by political, legal, economic, and cultural forces, as well
as the ways in which the system began to alter those social relations in return. In the final chapter,
I offer three small extensions to the literature on payment systems, cooperative networks,
and technology and culture.