Betreff: | [AISWorld] Call for Papers: ISJ Special Issue - Interpreting Digital Enabled Social Networks |
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Datum: | Thu, 18 Nov 2010 13:27:31 -0000 |
Von: | Eoin.Whelan <Eoin.Whelan@ul.ie> |
An: | <aisworld@lists.aisnet.org> |
Hi
Can you post the following details on the AIS
mailing list please.
Information Systems
Journal Special Issue CFP - Interpreting Digital Enabled
Social Networks
Special Issue Guest Editors
Eoin Whelan, University of Limerick, Ireland
Brian Butler, University of Pittsburgh,
USA
Robin Teigland,
Stockholm School of Economics
Emmanuelle Vaast, Long Island University, USA
While the study of social networks enjoys
a long and rich tradition, particularly in the fields of
sociology and anthropology, it has only recently grown in
popularity among IS researchers interested in applying
established social network theories to online environments.
This recent interest from the IS community has been driven by a
number of factors including the advances in the computing and
visualisation power of social network analysis packages, the
public availability of large-scale empirical datasets (such as
the Enron email archive), and the emergence of the popular
online social networking services Facebook, LinkedIn, MySpace,
and Twitter, as well as other platforms that facilitate mass
collaboration and self-organisation, such as blogs, wikis, user
tagging systems, and even the more recent emergence of virtual
worlds. As such, a number of prominent IS journals have already
dedicated special issues to the topic of digital enabled social
networks in recent times. While the studies published in these
special issues have generated many important insights, the
majority have tended to investigate digital enabled social
networks with a positivist philosophy employing quantitative
methods. Much of our current understanding of the dynamics of
these social structures stems from methods which measure and
correlate the overall network structure, or the individual’s
position within the network, to a variety of dependent
variables. There is much that has
yet to be understood about social networks constructed on
digital platforms, particularly their impact on organisational
life. Interpretative studies can contribute greatly by
providing rich and deep insights into the inner workings of
these important organisational forms and the technical,
behavioural, and economic challenges they face.
The aim of this special issue is to advance the
state of social network research within the IS field by
discussing and disseminating empirical results gained through
interpretative studies. The focus is upon highlighting work
that makes significant theoretical and empirical advances to
our understanding of digital enabled social networks.
Submissions that address methodological issues associated with
the study of social networks in IS research are also welcome.
Topics may include, but are not limited to the
following:
· New qualitative approaches to study digital
enabled social networks
· Assessing the nature and quality of information
exchange and knowledge creation in digital enabled social
networks
· IS case studies that describe how digital enabled
social networks can be harnessed in organisational settings
· Open innovation/co-creation through digital
enabled social networks
· Interpretative studies investigating
entrepreneurship and the rise of occupational communities
through digital enabled social networks
· Interpretative insights of leadership and
governance in digital enabled social networks
· Qualitative approaches to examine the interplay
between online and offline social networks
· Social networks and IT adoption
· Interpretative studies to ascertain the role of
ICT in the diffusion of information, trends, behaviours, and
innovations in social networks
· Combining social network analysis and qualitative
approaches in IS research
· Methodological issues in IS social network
research
· Critical reviews of the digital enabled social
network literature
Submission Guidelines
Manuscripts
should not normally exceed 7000 words and should be submitted
online at http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/isj.
Authors will have to select Special Issue Submission as the
manuscript type. Author guidelines are available at ‘author
guidelines’ at http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/journals/isj/.
All submissions will be
peer-reviewed following the double-blind review process of ISJ.
The objective is to apply very high standards of acceptance
while ensuring fair, timely and efficient review cycles.
Timeline
Full initial paper submission
deadline: 31 August 2011
First Review deadline: 30 November 2011
Revised paper submission deadline: (if required) 31 January 2012
Second Review deadline: 16 March 2012
Camera-ready paper submission deadline: 30 April 2012
Guest Editors
Dr. Eoin
Whelan
Dept. of
Management and Marketing
Kemmy Business
School
University of
Limerick
Limerick, Ireland
Tel:
+353-61-233615
Fax:
+353-61-213196
Email:
eoin.whelan@ul.ie
Eoin Whelan’s Webpage
Dr. Robin
Teigland
Center for
Competitiveness & Strategy
Stockholm School
of Economics
Box 6501,
Stockholm SE-113 53,
Sweden
Tel: +46-8-7369633
Fax: +46-8-31 81 86
Email: robin.teigland@hhs.se
Robin Teigland’s
Webpage
Dr. Brian
Butler
Katz Graduate
School of Business
University of
Pittsburgh
PA 15260, USA
Tel: (412) 648
1614
Fax: (412)
648-1693
Email:
bbutler@katz.pitt.edu
Brian Butler’s Webpage
Dr. Emmanuelle Vaast
Department
of Managerial Sciences
School
of Business, Public Administration and Information Sciences
Long
Island University, Brooklyn
NY
11201, USA
Tel: (718)
488-3391
Fax: (718)
488-1125
Email:
emmanuelle.vaast@liu.edu
Emmanuelle
Vaast’s Webpage
Dr. Eoin Whelan
Lecturer in Information
Management
Department of Management and Marketing (S1-06)
Kemmy Business School
University of Limerick
Limerick
Telephone:
061-233615
Fax: 061-213196
Email: eoin.whelan@ul.ie