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Call for
Papers
A new paradigm is
sweeping the society, organisations and the business environment. In
fact, society and business world alike are moving from its tangible
bases to intangible ones based on knowledge and information systems
(IS) to support its management, use and sharing. In this emerging
paradigm, terms like information, communication, knowledge, and
learning have acquired a critical relevance to the understanding of
the nature of contemporary business. This led authors such as Drucker
(1993) to state that “we are entering the knowledge society in which
the basic economic resource… is knowledge”.
In fact, since
the mid-1980s, there has been a sudden avalanche of a new kind of
vocabulary. Corporations, which so far had been economic entities, are
being described as ‘information-based organizations’, ‘learning
organizations’, ‘knowledge-creating companies’ or knowledge intensive
organisations. Instead of product-market strategies, the fashionable
business discourse invokes core competencies, intangible assets,
knowledge-based capabilities, intellectual capital, knowledge
management etc. Consequently, in this 21st century of ours, terms
such as intellectual capital, knowledge management, and knowledge
mapping have increasingly become part of the corporate landscape.
However, none of
this apparent revolution would be possible without the underlying
technological support provided by IS. The IADIS Information Systems
Conference (IS 2011) aims to provide a forum for the discussion of IS
taking a socio-technological perspective. It aims to address the
issues related to design, development and use of IS in organisations
from a socio-technological perspective, as well as to discuss IS
professional practice, research and teaching. A set of key issues has
been identified (see below). However, these do not aim at being
prescriptive, or set in stone, and any innovative contributions that
do not fit into these areas will also be considered.
Key issues in
this conference will focus on:
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IS in
Practice, Technology Infrastructures and Organisational Processes
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Power, Cultural, Behavioural and Political issues
- New
Organisational Forms
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Dilution of Organisational Boundaries
- The
centrality of IS and IT in Organisational
Processes
- IS
Management
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Information Management
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Knowledge Management
- IS
and SMEs
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Innovation and IS
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Innovation and Knowledge Management
- IS
and Change Management
- IS
and Organisation Development
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Enterprise Application Integration
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Enterprise Resource Planning
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Business Process Change
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IS Design,
Development and Management Issues and Methodologies
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Design and Development Methodologies and
Frameworks
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Iterative and Incremental Methodologies
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Agile Methodologies
- IS
Design and Development as a Component-Based
Process
- IS
Design and Development as Social Negotiation
Process
- IS D
Design and Development as a Global and
Distributed Process
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Outsourcing in IS
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Outsourcing Risks, Barriers and Opportunities
- IS
Project Management
- IS
Quality Management and Assurance
- IS
Standards and Compliance Issues
- Risk
Management in IS
- Risk
Management in IS Design and Development
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IS
Professional Issues
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Ethical, social, privacy, security and moral issues
in an e-society
- The
role of information in the information society
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Myths, taboos and misconceptions in IS
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Practitioner and Research Relationship, Projects and
Links
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Validity, Usefulness and Applicability of IS Academic
Research
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Industrial Research versus Academic Research Issues
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Industry Innovation and Leadership and Academic
Laggards
- IS
consultancy as a profession
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Organisational IS Roles
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Communities of practice and Knowledge Sharing
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IS Research
- Core
Theories, Conceptualisations and Paradigms in
IS Research
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Ontological Assumptions in IS Research
- IS
Research Constraints, Limitations and
Opportunities
- IS
vs Computer Science Research
- IS
vs Business Studies
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Positivist, Interpretivist and Critical Approaches to
IS Research
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Quantitative vs. Qualitative Methods
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Deductive vs Inductive Approaches
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Multi-method Approaches and Triangulations in IS
Research
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Design Research and the Sciences of the Artificial
in IS
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Multidisciplinary Views and Multi Methodological
Approaches
- New
and alternative approaches to IS research
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Examples of experimental research designs in IS |
IS Learning
and Teaching
- Patterns
of Demand for IS Teaching Provision
- Fads,
Fashions and Fetishes in IS Curricula
- Pedagogic
practice in Teaching IS
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E-Learning in IS
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Instructional Design for IS
- National
Cultures and Approaches to Pedagogy
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Multiculturality and Diversity Issues in IS Learning and Teaching
The Conference
will be composed of several types of contributions:
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Full Papers
– These include mainly accomplished research results and have 8
pages at the maximum (5,000 words).
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Short Papers
– These are mostly composed of work in progress reports or fresh
developments and have 4 pages at maximum (2,500 words).
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Reflection
Papers – These might review recent research literature
pertaining to a particular problem or approach, indicate what the
findings suggest, and/or provide a suggestion - with rationale and
justification - for a different approach or perspective on that
problem. Reflection papers might also analyze general trends or
discuss important issues in topics related to Applied Computing.
These have two pages at maximum (1500 words).
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Posters /
Demonstrations – These have one page at the maximum (625 words)
besides the poster itself (or demonstration) that will be exposed at
the conference.
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Tutorials
– Tutorials can be proposed by scholars or company representatives.
A proposal of maximum 250 words is expected.
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Panels –
Discussions on selected topics will be held. A proposal of maximum
250 words is expected.
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Invited
Talks – These will be made of contributions from well-known
scholars and company representatives. An abstract will be included
in the conference proceedings.
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Doctoral
Consortium - The Doctoral Consortium will discuss on going work
of PhD students in an informal and formative atmosphere.
Contributions to the consortium should take the form of either:
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a
critical literature review of the research topic providing the
rationale for the relevance and interest of the research topic; or
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a short
paper discussing the research question(s), research objectives,
research methodology and work done so far.
Doctoral
Consortium Contributions should have a maximum 2,500 words (4
pages).
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Corporate
Showcases & Exhibitions – The former enables Companies to
present recent developments and applications, inform a large and
qualified audience of your future directions and showcase company’s
noteworthy products and services. There will be a time slot for
companies to make their presentation in a room. The latter enables
companies the opportunity to display its latest offerings of
hardware, software, tools, services and books, through an exhibit
booth. For further details please contact the publicity chair -
secretariat@is-conf.org.
This is a blind
peer-reviewed conference.
Important Dates:
- Submission deadline
(last call):
26 January 2011
- Notification to Authors
(last call):
14 February 2011
- Final Camera-Ready Submission and Early Registration
(1st call): Until
20 December 2010
- Late Registration
(1st call): After 20 December 2010
- Conference: Avila, Spain, 11 to 13 March 2011
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