Through the data analysis, the orders of worth theory (boltanski & thévenot, 2006) emerged as an insightful theoretical framing. Field research and data collection in this ongoing study involve. The study presented here develops theory and generates new knowledge in regard to the justification used in digital nomadism, and reveals three themes that explain how people justify their engagement in digital nomadism. In the domain of digital work, a new phenomenon has emerged that is increasingly referred to as “digital nomadism”. Digital nomadism involves mostly western professionals using a range of information systems (is) and information technology (it) tools to work digitally over the internet while travelling perpetually in typically exotic locations. It answers to the research question: Why do people engage in digital nomadism? The preliminary data analysis reveals three themes that explain how people justify their engagement in digital nomadism. The theoretical analysis positions these three themes in. We must understand the phenomenon, and to do this, we must learn what violent groups are trying to say. Th at some choose violence tells us something about the perpetrators, inevitably, about ourselves and the society we have built. This collection of provocative contributions addresses theory and research on violence as a group phenomenon. Over the last 30 years, critical race theory (crt) has been applied successfully as an analytical framework, through which, to explore matters of “race,” racialization, and subordination in numerous fields. It answers to the research question: Why do people engage in digital nomadism? The preliminary data analysis reveals three themes that explain how people justify their engagement in digital nomadism. The theoretical analysis positions these three.