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AMCIS 2020, Salt Lake City, UT, USA, August 12-16
MINI-TRACK: E-commerce in Globalization Era
TRACK: Global, International, and Cross Cultural Research in
Information Systems
DESCRIPTION
Cross-border e-commerce, which is a new type of trading, has
developed rapidly integrating the global economy. Globally, both
suppliers and consumers from all over the world could trade online
across time and space to satisfy the demand from each other.
Meanwhile, sellers get the opportunity to expand their businesses
outside their often-saturated home market and tap into newer
markets. The rapid growth of global e-commerce, however, is not
without its roadblocks. In fact, there have been many barriers and
challenges in such areas as logistics, customs clearance,
international payment, customer services, product frauds, global
e-commerce talents training and education, culture and social
adaption. Common problems reported by buyers in global e-commerce
are product frauds and counterfeits, limitation of delivery
methods, failed deliveries, contract termination, unauthorized
charges, defective products, and inconvenient returns. In
addition, global strategic factors, government-imposed factors,
market factors, and transaction-specific factors jointly impact
the development of global e-commerce, making it more difficult to
solve those problems. We thus organize this mini-track to explore
the many substantial challenges of global issue in e-commerce.
Possible contributions may include, but are not limited to, the
following topics:
· The success of e-commerce in globalization era (focusing on both
buyers and seller’s perspectives)
· International online marketing related issues
· The policies and e-commerce in globalization era
· Mobile technologies and e-commerce in globalization era
· Logistics and global e-commerce
· Education and training models for e-commerce in globalization
era
· Communication and collaboration for e-commerce in globalization
era
· Economic and business innovation for e-commerce in globalization
era
· Trust, privacy and security related issues in global e-commerce
· Service and cross-border e-commerce
· Localization related issues in global e-commerce
· Cross-cultural issues in global e-commerce
· Artificial intelligence and Fin-tech in global e-commerce
· Other emerging issues in global e-commerce.
SUBMISSION TYPES
• Full papers must not exceed 10 pages (approx. 5,000 words)
• Emergent Research Forum (ERF) papers must not exceed 5 pages
(approx. 2,500 words)
All submissions must conform to the AMCIS 2020 submission
template
<https://amcis2020.aisconferences.org/submissions/types-of-submissions/>
and will be peer-reviewed using a double-blind system.
IMPORTANT DATES
January 6, 2020: Manuscript submissions for AMCIS 2020 begin
February 28, 2020: AMCIS manuscript submissions closes at 5:00pm
MST
March 5, 2020: All papers have assigned reviewers
April 13, 2020: Track Chair recommendations due
April 22, 2020: Notification of Workshop acceptance
April 22, 2020: Camera-ready papers are due at 5:00 pm MST
MINI-TRACK CHAIRS
Dr. Jian Mou
Jian.mou@xidian.edu.cn
Xidian University
Dr. Lin Xiao
xiaolin@nuaa.edu.cn
Nanjing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics
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