-------- Forwarded Message --------
Subject: [wkwi] ECIS 2024 Call for Papers
Date: Sat, 9 Sep 2023 13:49:17 +0000
From: Seidel, Stefan <stefan.seidel(a)wiso.uni-koeln.de>
Reply-To: Seidel, Stefan <stefan.seidel(a)wiso.uni-koeln.de>
To: wkwi(a)listserv.dfn.de <wkwi(a)listserv.dfn.de>
Dear Colleagues,
The 32nd European Conference on Information Systems (ECIS 2024) will
take place from June 13 to June 19, 2024, in Paphos, Cyprus
(https://ecis2024.eu/). The conference theme of ECIS 2024 is “People
First: Constructing Digital Futures Together.”
We invite submissions of Completed Research and Short Papers across 25
conference tracks, including our theme track: “People First:
Constructing Digital Futures Together.” We also invite submissions for
Panel Proposals and TREO Workshop Papers.
* Completed Research and Short Paper submission deadline: 17 November 2023
* Notification of Completed Research and Short Paper (conditional)
acceptance: 28 February 2024
* Panel Proposal and TREO Workshop Paper submission deadline: 11 March
2024
* Notification of Panel Proposal and TREO Workshop acceptance: 25
March 2024
Please find details at: https://ecis2024.eu/call-for-main-track-papers/
Please approach the track chairs or program chairs with any questions
regarding your submission.
Sincerely,
ECIS 2024 Program Chairs
Ioanna Constantiou, Copenhagen Business School, Denmark
Brian Fitzgerald, University of Limerick, Ireland
Stefan Seidel, University of Cologne, Germany
-------- Forwarded Message --------
Subject: [AISWorld] ECIS 2024 Call for Papers
Date: Sat, 9 Sep 2023 10:04:19 +0000
From: Seidel, Stefan <stefan.seidel(a)wiso.uni-koeln.de>
To: aisworld(a)lists.aisnet.org <aisworld(a)lists.aisnet.org>
Dear Information Systems Community,
The 32nd European Conference on Information Systems (ECIS 2024) will
take place from June 13 to June 19, 2024, in Paphos, Cyprus
(https://ecis2024.eu/). The conference theme of ECIS 2024 is "People
First: Constructing Digital Futures Together."
We invite submissions of Completed Research and Short Papers across 25
conference tracks, including our theme track: "People First:
Constructing Digital Futures Together." We also invite submissions for
Panel Proposals and TREO Workshop Papers.
* Completed Research and Short Paper submission deadline: 17 November 2023
* Notification of Completed Research and Short Paper (conditional)
acceptance: 28 February 2024
* Panel Proposal and TREO Workshop Paper submission deadline: 11 March 2024
* Notification of Panel Proposal and TREO Workshop acceptance: 25 March 2024
Please find details at: https://ecis2024.eu/call-for-main-track-papers/
Please approach the track chairs or program chairs with any questions
regarding your submission.
Sincerely,
ECIS 2024 Program Chairs
Ioanna Constantiou, Copenhagen Business School, Denmark
Brian Fitzgerald, University of Limerick, Ireland
Stefan Seidel, University of Cologne, Germany
_______________________________________________
AISWorld mailing list
AISWorld(a)lists.aisnet.org
-------- Forwarded Message --------
Subject: [AISWorld] JAIS Special Issue on “Digital Sustainability and
Information Systems Research" - Call for Papers
Date: Tue, 5 Sep 2023 02:08:06 +0000
From: Julia Kotlarsky <jkot131(a)uoa.auckland.ac.nz>
To: aisworld(a)lists.aisnet.org <aisworld(a)lists.aisnet.org>
CC: Juliana Sutanto <juliana.sutanto(a)monash.edu>, Jacqueline Corbett
<Jacqueline.Corbett(a)fsa.ulaval.ca>
We are excited to announce JAIS Special Issue “Digital Sustainability
and Information Systems Research: New Challenges and Theoretical
Perspectives”
See details on JAIS web-site
https://aisel.aisnet.org/jais/SI-DigitalSustainabilityFINAL.pdf
Special Issue Guest Editors
Julia Kotlarsky – University of Auckland, New Zealand
Jacqueline Corbett - Université Laval, Canada
Juliana Sutanto – Monash University, Australia
Thomas Kude – University of Bamberg, Germany
Yenni Tim – University of New South Wales, Australia
Deadline for paper submissions is 2 October 2024. Ahead of this
deadline, in February 2024, we will be holding an online information
session and will invite potential authors to send us specific questions
to address during this session.
-----------
JAIS Special Issue Call for Papers
Digital Sustainability and Information Systems Research: New challenges
and theoretical perspectives
Objective
Sustainability is a moral and existential imperative of our time. As
Information Systems (IS) scholars, we are aware of the immense impact of
digital technologies on efforts and initiatives towards sustainable
practice happening locally and globally. Furthermore, because digital
phenomena lie at the heart of our discipline, IS researchers are well
positioned to join these efforts. This Special Issue aims to champion
new digital sustainability research programs targeting the planet’s most
pressing sustainability challenges from the past decade. We hope it will
contribute towards building novel collective knowledge and help shape
digital sustainability research in IS.
Motivation for this Special Issue
Human society is approaching the edge of a dangerous precipice. The
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s (IPCC) Sixth Assessment
Report unequivocally confirms that human activities have caused global
warming, predicting that even with current commitments and mitigation
efforts, it will be difficult to limit warming below the critical
threshold of 2oC (IPCC, 2023). The planet’s air, land, and water
continue to be threatened on several fronts, with research suggesting
that the safe operating zone for six of the nine planetary boundaries
has already been breached (Stockholm Resilience Centre, n.d.). Over the
past decade, extreme weather events such as droughts, floods, fires and
heatwaves have not only increased in frequency but also in magnitude. In
addition to causing environmental impacts, these events have a
significant impact on society, further complicating the pursuit of
social and economic sustainability.
In 2020, about 724 million people were living in conditions of extreme
poverty, with almost 30% of the world’s population suffering from some
level of food insecurity (United Nations, 2023). Equality for women and
other marginalized groups continues to lag. The World Bank (2022)
reports that 2.4 billion women globally do not have the same economic
rights as men, and despite the adoption of the United Nations
Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples in 2007 (United Nations,
2007), Indigenous Peoples around the world continue to suffer the
intergenerational trauma of colonization. The trend towards urbanization
endures, with cities struggling to ensure inclusive, resilient, and
sustainable living environments for all residents (United Nations 2023).
On top of all these challenges, violent conflicts have led to the forced
migration of millions of people and the deaths of thousands of civilians
(United Nations 2023). These alarming circumstances highlight the lack
of progress towards the United Nation’s Sustainable Development Goals.
As stated in the 2023 Progress Report ,the promise of leaving no one
behind is in peril: of 140 measured targets, only 12% are on track for
2030, and about half are moderately or severely off track.
In response to the urgent need to address sustainability challenges,
organizations, governments and industries worldwide have started to make
efforts in recent years to harness the potential of digital
technologies. Examples of such efforts range from specific solutions,
such as the Internet of Things (IoT) sensors widely used by many
organizations to pursue sustainability objectives, to the birth of new
data-driven companies that are applying advanced analytics and
artificial intelligence (AI) to offer sustainability-related data services.
This harnessing of digital technologies to address sustainability
challenges has impacted the way practitioners view this emerging trend,
which they increasingly refer to as digital sustainability. For example,
Gartner describes digital sustainability as harnessing the “tools of
digital transformation, such as enhanced connectivity and the Internet
of Things (IoT), to improve the environment and support sustainable
business operations”. On a global scale, the United Nations has
initiated conversations on the relationship between digital
sustainability and environmental concerns. For example, the focus of the
United Nations Environment Program (UNEP) is “accelerating and scaling
environmental sustainability by applying data, digital technologies, and
solutions to UNEP’s key activities, products, and services and
ultimately delivers on its key action areas—climate, nature, and
pollution”(UN Environment Programme, n.d.). In the domain of social
sustainability, the United Nations chosen theme of “DigitALL: Innovation
and Technology for Gender Equality” for International Women’s Day 2023
emphasizes the potential of digital technologies for empowering women
and girls.
However, IS research has been lagging behind the digital sustainability
discourse happening in practice. As argued in a recent JAIS editorial on
digital sustainability (Kotlarsky et al., 2023), the IS research
community has a strong foundation to draw upon (Watson et al., 2020),
ranging from research into Green IS (e.g., Leidner et al. 2022; Watson
et al. 2021; Corbett & Mellouli, 2017) to studies addressing significant
societal challenges (e.g., Tong et al. 2022; Young et. al. 2019; Young
2018; Tim et al. 2017, Puri 2007). As Urquhart and her colleagues (2008)
note, the poor cannot eat technology, but the mindful design and use of
technology can contribute to innovative solutions and positive impacts.
In particular, we consider that the recent shift in the way IS research
approaches digital phenomena offers new perspectives on the relationship
between digital technologies and sustainability.
Building on Baskerville et al.’s (2020) contention that the classical
view of an information system as representing and reflecting physical
reality has become obsolete, we agree that an ontological reversal has
taken place at the junction between technology and sustainability
whereby the digital version of business solutions is created first
(e.g., algorithms and data analytics solutions) and the physical version
second (e.g., material waste) (Kotlarsky et al. 2023). As a result, the
assumption that IS only represents the physical assets within
sustainability phenomena is being challenged. This provides an
opportunity for the IS community to drive a more inclusive agenda on
digital sustainability, one that encompasses phenomena in which the
impact of digital technologies and macro-level environmental, social,
and economic objectives converge. Accordingly, this Special Issue seeks
contributions that delve into digital sustainability and encompass “the
development, deployment, and utilization of digital resources and
artifacts toward improving the environment, society, and economic
welfare” (Kotlarsky et al. 2023, p. 938).
What we are interested in
We invite original and thought-provoking studies that advance and shape
our understanding of digital sustainability as an emerging research
area. We are interested in studies that contribute to our understanding
of environmental and/or social sustainability, and studies that
elucidate new forms of digital sustainability. We therefore welcome
studies that engage with digital sustainability by building on
theoretical foundations from the extant IS literature, as well as
studies that bring insights from other disciplines into the IS research
domain. Furthermore, we seek studies that consider digital
sustainability at all levels and perspectives, in the context of
developing and developed nations. We specifically welcome submissions
that integrate more than one dimension of digital sustainability—the
environment, society, and/or economic welfare. Overall, we aim to
present a collection of papers that provides a balanced, integrated, and
cumulative perspective on digital sustainability.
Potential topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
Design and development considerations
* Research that investigates the processes, principles, resources or
capabilities required for the design and development of digital
sustainability artefacts
* Intervention-based research that engages directly in enhancing
sustainability practices within organizations or communities through
effective leveraging of digital technologies
* Studies that examine how the different inter- and intra-organizational
actors involved in digital sustainability projects engage and interact
as they develop, deploy, and govern digital solutions for macro-level
sustainability agenda
* Explorations of the relationship(s) between digital objects and the
physical reality they shape/create in the context of social and
environmental sustainability
Use considerations
* Research that examines how digital technologies support key
organizational activities (e.g., decision-making, resource management,
and innovation processes) in the management of macro-level
sustainability challenges, such as climate change
* Theoretical and/or empirical investigations of the interplay between
sustainability initiatives and other digital agendas, such as digital
transformation
* Studies of ‘computed human experiences’ with respect to
sustainability, for example, how people interact with complex
environmental and social problems through immersive technologies
* Research on the challenges and opportunities for reclaiming and
rejuvenating Indigenous cultures and knowledge as well as advancing
Indigenous community economic development through decolonized digital
artefacts
Management and governance considerations
* Studies that explore the governance of digital sustainability and new
ways of organizing for sustainability in different settings. For
example, where do digital sustainability initiatives emerge and how do
they unfold?
* Research on the role of different actors in the digital sustainability
ecosystem and their impact on the emergence of new digital
sustainability sectors and business models
* Studies on the sustainability agenda at the community and societal
levels, and the role of digital technologies in either empowering or
constraining sustainability-driven collective actions
* Policy implications related to digital sustainability for
organizations, individuals, and societies, especially as they relate to
ethical concerns and social well-being
Outcomes and consequences
* Studies that incorporate multiple aspects of digital sustainability
performance to enrich and expand our understanding of the impact of
digital technologies on various stakeholders
* Case studies and other investigations of real-world impacts
(positive/negative, planned/unintended) of digital sustainability on
vulnerable or marginalized communities
* Given that the well-being of future generations is a central concern,
research that investigates alternative ways of measuring progress toward
long-term sustainability objectives and how to link these with
short-term performance
* Beyond techno-optimism, identifying the key challenges presented by
digital technologies, either directly or through their use, that
negatively impact sustainability agendas, coupled with empirical
insights for mitigating these challenges
What we are not interested in
We are not interested in studies that only make peripheral contributions
to digital sustainability. This may be the case when the original
research design, including the data collected, was not intended to
contribute to understanding of digital sustainability, or when
engagement with the concept of digital sustainability is marginal. A
possible example of the latter would be studies that append a connection
to one or more Sustainable Development Goals as a post-hoc discussion,
yet the core research problem is not substantially driven by a
sustainability issue.
Given that this Special Issue aims to promote research programs that
relate to the planet’s most pressing sustainability challenges, we
believe that environmental and social welfare are of utmost importance.
Therefore, we are not interested in studies concerned solely with
economic welfare at the business level, such as those on sustainable
business operations or organizational sustainability. We do, however,
welcome submissions that couple economic welfare with other dimensions,
such as environmental or social welfare, especially when integrated
within a broader, macro-level sustainability agenda.
We also emphasize that while related to digital responsibility (AIS,
2023) and digital resilience (Boh et al., 2023), digital sustainability
differs from these notions. Therefore, we are ONLY interested in studies
on digital sustainability. We recommend potential authors consult the
recent editorial on digital sustainability by Kotlarsky et al. (2023),
which provides a conceptualization and extensive discussion of digital
sustainability and its ontological foundations.
Date (tentative)
February 2024
Online information session (we invite potential authors to send us
specific questions to address during this session)
2 October 2024
Deadline for paper submission
1 February 2025
First-round decisions
1 June 2025
Deadline to submit revised papers
15 September 2025
Second-round decisions
1 February 2025
Deadline to submit revised papers
1 June 2025
Provisional/Final decisions
1 July 2025
Deadline to submit final paper (if minor revision is required)
Special Issue Guest Editors
Julia Kotlarsky – University of Auckland, New Zealand
Jacqueline Corbett - Université Laval, Canada
Juliana Sutanto – Monash University, Australia
Thomas Kude – University of Bamberg, Germany
Yenni Tim – University of New South Wales, Australia
Special Issue Guest Editors Bios
Julia Kotlarsky
(j.kotlarsky(a)auckland.ac.nz<mailto:j.kotlarsky@auckland.ac.nz>) is a
Professor of Information Systems at the University of Auckland Business
School, New Zealand. She holds a PhD from the Rotterdam School of
Management (Netherlands) and has worked previously in the UK. Julia’s
research interests revolve around digital sustainability; the interface
between artificial intelligence technologies and humans, focusing on
data and digital transformation; and technology sourcing. Her work has
been published in MIS Quarterly, and the Journal of Management
Information Systems, Journal of Information Technology, Journal of
Strategic Information Systems, among other outlets. She has published 17
books, among them The Handbook of Global Outsourcing and Offshoring,
which is widely used by practitioners and academics around the world.
Julia is a co-founder of the AIS Special Interest Group on Advances in
Sourcing. She serves as a Senior Editor for the Journal of the
Association for Information Systems and the Journal of Information
Technology and is on the editorial board of Information Systems Research.
Jacqueline Corbett
(Jacqueline.corbett(a)fsa.ulaval.ca<mailto:Jacqueline.corbett@fsa.ulaval.ca>)
is a Professor of Management Information Systems in the Faculty of
Business Administration at Université Laval in Quebec City, Canada. She
holds a PhD (MIS) from Queen’s University at Kingston, Canada.
Jacqueline’s research focuses on the design and use of information
systems (IS) in the pursuit of sustainable development. Her research
takes a multidisciplinary and multi-method approach to investigate
emerging questions around clean energy, smart and sustainable cities,
open data and data waste, digital transformation, and digital innovation
by Indigenous Peoples and communities. Her work is published in the
Journal of the Association of Information Systems, Information Systems
Journal, Journal of Business Ethics, Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal,
and International Journal of Information Management, among other
outlets. Jacqueline currently serves as President of the AIS Special
Interest Group on Green IS (SIGGreen) and was previously Co-chair of the
AIS Women’s Network College. She has been a guest editor and editorial
board member for multiple sustainability-related special issues and is
an Associate Editor for Communications of the Association for
Information Systems.
Juliana Sutanto
(juliana.sutanto(a)monash.edu<mailto:juliana.sutanto@monash.edu>) is a
Professor in Information Systems in the Department of Human-Centred
Computing at the Faculty of IT, Monash University, Australia. She leads
the Digital Transformation Group in the department. She is also the
Indonesia Lead for the faculty. She has research expertise in system
design, user behavioral analysis, and data management. She collaborates
with researchers from other disciplines to address societal and
environmental challenges. Her on-going research work includes
information systems for disaster management, digital resilience and
community resilience, and health information systems. She is the
recipient of an Informs ISS Design Science Award for privacy-safe
design. Her research has been published in Management Science, MIS
Quarterly, Information Systems Research, Journal of the Association for
Information Systems, and Journal of Management Information Systems,
among other outlets. She was previously an Associate Editor for MIS
Quarterly and is currently a Senior Editor for the Journal of the
Association for Information Systems.
Thomas Kude
(thomas.kude(a)uni-bamberg.de<mailto:thomas.kude@uni-bamberg.de>) is a
Professor at the University of Bamberg, Germany, where he holds the
chair of information systems and platform economy. He received his PhD
from the University of Mannheim, Germany, and has previously worked in
France. Thomas is interested in the development and application of
information systems at various levels of analysis. His recent research
work primarily focuses on digital innovation by collectives of
organizations and individuals. For example, he has studied the
governance and evolution of digital platforms and ecosystems in
different domains, including enterprise software and mobile apps. He has
also studied collaboration in teams, in particular software development
teams. Thomas’ work has been published in MIS Quarterly, Information
Systems Research, Information Systems Journal, and Journal of Operations
Management, among other outlets. Thomas serves as an associate editor
for MIS Quarterly and Business & Information Systems Engineering (BISE).
He is on the editorial review board of the Journal of the Association
for Information Systems.
Yenni Tim (yenni.tim(a)unsw.edu.au<mailto:yenni.tim@unsw.edu.au>) is a
Senior Lecturer at the School of Information Systems and Technology
Management (SISTM), University of New South Wales (UNSW) Business
School, Australia. Yenni leads a research program that addresses
practical challenges at the intersection of digital capacity and
societal resilience. Her qualitative fieldwork and action design
research projects seek to develop new knowledge and digital
interventions to support organizations and communities in building
resilience against societal shocks, such as disasters, environmental
crises, digital disadvantage, and social exclusion. Yenni’s work has
been published in the Journal of Strategic Information Systems,
Information Systems Journal, Information & Management, and European
Journal of Operational Research, among other outlets. She is the
recipient of an AIS Early Career Award (2021). Yenni currently serves as
a Managing Editor for the Journal of the Association for Information
Systems, an Associate Editor for the European Journal of Information
Systems and Information Systems Journal, and a Guest Editor for Special
Issues of the Information Systems Journal and Academy of Management
Perspectives. In addition, she co-leads the Sustainability and
Resilience research stream at the Digital Sustainability Knowledge Hub
within the UNSW Business School.
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Boh, W., Constantinides, P., Padmanabhan, B., & Viswanathan, S. (2023).
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Corbett, J., & Mellouli, S. (2017). Winning the SDG battle in cities:
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Leidner, D., Sutanto, J., & Goutas, L., (2022). Multifarious roles and
conflicts on an inter-organizational Green IS. MIS Quarterly, 46(1),
591–608.
Medaglia, R., & Damsgaard, J. (2020). Blockchain and the United Nations
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Vogel, K. N. Shen, & P. S. Ling (Eds.), PACIS 2020 Proceedings.
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enabled disaster response: The emergence of social media as boundary
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Urquhart, C., Liyanage, S., & Kah, M. M. (2008). ICTs and poverty
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Watson, R. T., Elliot, S., Corbett, J., Farkas, D., Feizabadi, A.,
Gupta, A., Iyer, L., Sen, S., Sharda, R., Shin, N., & Thapa, D. (2021).
How the AIS can improve its contributions to the UN’s sustainability
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Systems, 48(1), 42.
Watson, R. T., Webster, J., Corbett, J., Elliot, S.; Radhakrishnan, S.,
& Ketter, W. (2020). Senior Scholars’ Consortium: How can IS scholars
increase global sustainability, both collectively and personally?. ICIS
2020 Proceedings, 7. https://aisel.aisnet.org/icis2020/panels/panels/7
Young, A. G. (2018). Using ICT for social good: Cultural identity
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Young, A. G., Selander, L., & Vaast, E. (2019). Digital organizing for
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collective action, social movements, and digital technologies.
Information and Organization, 29(3), 100257.
On behalf of all guest editors of this Special Issue:
Professor Julia Kotlarsky PhD
Technology and Global Sourcing
Department of Information Systems & Operations Management
The University of Auckland Business School
Sir Owen G Glenn Building | 12 Grafton Rd | Auckland
Phone: +64 9 373 7599 ext 83305
Email: j.kotlarsky(a)auckland.ac.nz<mailto:j.kotlarsky@auckland.ac.nz>
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