Betreff: | [wkwi] 2nd CfP ECIS 2013 in Utrecht - Track "IT Governance & Sourcing" |
---|---|
Datum: | Thu, 8 Nov 2012 13:55:20 +0100 (CET) |
Von: | Martin Wiener <martin.wiener@wiso.uni-erlangen.de> |
Antwort an: | postmaster@idefix.buva.sowi.uni-bamberg.de |
:: CALL FOR PAPERS ::
21st European Conference on Information Systems (ECIS)
June 5-8, 2013,
Utrecht University, Netherlands
https://sites.google.com/site/ecis2013nl/
Track: IT Governance & Sourcing
*** Deadline for
paper submission: December 7th, 2012 ***
:: Track
Description ::
In today’s
environment, the available choices and possibilities
for how to source IT make the demands on effective
IT governance even greater and more multifaceted.
Over the past decade “new” IT sourcing models, such
as offshore outsourcing or crowd and open sourcing,
have become well-established practices. By going
beyond borders and boundaries, these models
challenge existing conceptualizations and theories
of IT governance:
(1) Offshore
outsourced IT projects span national borders, bridge
organizational boundaries and highlight the
intersection ofcultures.
(2) Crowd- and
open-sourced projects not only challenge
organizational boundaries, but also traditional
ideas about ownership of resources, tasks and
outputs.
(3) Cloud services
may make the IT artifact seemingly disappear; but
while the IT resources have moved outside of the
organization’s boundaries, the efforts of molding
organizational routines, usage practices, and IT
resources have not disappeared and still have to be
controlled.
(4) In addition,
where more “traditional” technologies and
organizational arrangements are still dominant, such
as for example with ERP packages, the challenges of
exercising governance over development and
implementation efforts remain highly important and
complex.
IT sourcing
initiatives are often organized in the form of
projects. To advance such projects towards their
goals, governance and control mechanisms are needed
to regulate the actions of stakeholders, to motivate
participants, and to ensure that their capabilities
are fully brought to bear on the task. As such, the
term IT project governance emphasizes not only the
control of an individual project, but also the
organizational governance mechanisms for monitoring
and overseeing IT projects, which are enacted in
each individual project. This includes for example
the use of project managementoffices (PMOs), the
role of the board of directors, project portfolio
management practices, and the coordination of
related IT projects through “change programs” or
other coordination mechanisms.
The objective of
this track is to foster and promote research on IT
(project) governance and sourcing by providing
deeper, richer, and more nuanced insights into the
topic. The track particularly tries to bring
together researchers studying governance issues in
different sourcing contexts (e.g., outsourcing,
offshoring, agile and open source software
development, etc.), from different stakeholder
perspectives (e.g., client vs. vendor, business vs.
IT), as well as using innovative research methods.
We thus particularly welcome papers that address the
overall conference theme “Beyond Borders” by
addressing IT governance and sourcing at the
intersection between hierarchical, organizational,
national, and cultural borders. We also welcome
contributions that venture beyond the boundaries of
current conceptualizations and theorizations of IT
governance and sourcing.
The track invites
both completed research papers and research in
progress papers.
:: Track Topics
::
Topics of interest
include, but are not limited to:
*
ITgovernance: Effective governance
structures, processes, and capabilities; executive
and board involvement in IT governance; structure
and nature of business-IT relationships, etc.
*
ITsourcing decisions and outcomes of various
sourcing models including outsourcing, crowd and
open sourcing, sourcing via the cloud, offshoring,
nearshoring, insourcing, and shared services;
governance structures that produce sourcing
decisions; multi-vendor strategies, etc.
*
ITsourcing practices: Contractual
vs. relational governance, agency vs. stewardship
theories, client- vs. vendor-retained capabilities,
governance of vendor portfolios, etc.
*
Interfaces between IT governance and IT project
governance: Impact of IT governance
arrangements on IT projects; PMOs, project portfolio
management, and other arrangements that allow
monitoring, control, and prioritization of resources
and work across projects; executive and board
involvement in IT projects; roles and
responsibilities of IT project stakeholders, etc.
*
ITproject governance/control: Governance
of different project types and IS methodologies
(e.g., internal vs. outsourced, traditional vs.
agile), dynamics of governance and control
mechanisms over the project lifecycle, transmission
of control in hierarchical and lateral
relationships, etc.
* Social
aspects of IT (project) governance: Cultural
influences on governance practices, intended vs.
unintended effects of governance mechanisms, etc.
* New
theoretical perspectives and research approaches that
challenge and extend our understanding of IT
governance and sourcing such as critical and
constructivist views, action design research,
longitudinal andethnographic approaches, etc.
:: Track Chairs
::
Martin
Wiener, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Germany, martin.wiener@wiso.uni-erlangen.de (primary
contact)
Magnus
Mähring, Stockholm School of Economics, Sweden, magnus.mahring@hhs.se
Ulrich
Remus, University of Innsbruck, Austria, ulrich.remus@uibk.ac.at
:: Associate
Editors ::
Daniel Beimborn,
University of Bamberg, Germany
Jens Dibbern,
University of Bern, Switzerland
Robert Gregory, University of Göttingen, Germany
Julia Kotlarsky,
Aston Business School, UK
Susanne Leist,
University of Regensburg, Germany
Johan Magnusson,
University of Gothenburg, Sweden
Gary Pan,
Singapore Management University,Singapore
Joe Peppard,
Cranfield University, UK
Carol Saunders,
University of Central Florida, USA
Susanne
Strahringer, University of Dresden, Germany
Steffen
Zimmermann, University of Innsbruck, Austria