-------- Forwarded Message --------
CALL FOR PAPERS - Blockchain Cases and Innovations minitrack
Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences (HICSS-57),
Waikiki, Hawaii, January 3-6, 2024
http://www.hicss.org/ <http://www.hicss.org/>
Blockchain Cases and Innovations minitrack, under the
Organizational Systems and Technology track
https://hicss.hawaii.edu/tracks-57/organizational-systems-and-technology/#blockchain-cases-and-innovations-minitrack
<https://hicss.hawaii.edu/tracks-57/organizational-systems-and-technology/#blockchain-cases-and-innovations-minitrack>
Blockchain, the technology underlying cryptocurrencies like
Bitcoin, has been receiving considerable attention in recent
years, as new use cases in the public and private sector have been
identified. What started as a solution to the double-spending
problem in Bitcoin, is being explored as the backbone technology
in scenarios where a trusted third party (e.g., a notary or a
bank) is normally required. Using this technology, transactions
are securely registered on a data structure (aka the ledger)
replicated across a network of peers that validate the entries
using a consensus mechanism. New records are cryptographically
linked to existing ones, rendering them virtually immutable. The
resulting auditability and transparency have been leveraged in
proposing innovative solutions to land registries, to stop the
spread of conflict diamonds, to fight the counterfeiting of
medication, to make supply chains less opaque, and, generally, to
promote new financial services.
Additionally, blockchains can also store and enforce the execution
of algorithmic code know as smart contracts – pieces of code that
are executed automatically once predetermined conditions are met –
further reducing uncertainty and promoting confidence among
stakeholders that would not normally trust each other.
Nevertheless, we are still in the early days of blockchain
adoption, compared by some to the introduction of the World Wide
Web itself. Then, as now, few if any could predict the full extent
of the disruptive innovations that would emerge fostered by this
emerging technology.
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
• Innovative uses of Blockchain technology
• Blockchain case studies, applications, and implementations
• Blockchain and privacy, security, and identity
• Blockchain and digital transformation
• Decentralized Finance (DeFi)
• Decentralized Autonomous Organizations (DAOs)
• Decentralized Applications
• Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC)
• Non-Fungible Tokens (NFTs)
• Tokenization
• The social and organizational impact of blockchain
• Barriers and enablers in blockchain adoption
• Blockchain and business model innovation
• Regulatory frameworks for Blockchain
• Governance and Blockchain
• Verticals using Blockchain (financial, healthcare, energy,
transportation, others)
• Blockchain in e-government and public administration
• Blockchain and the Internet-of-Things
• Blockchain in education
• Blockchain in solving migration and refugee issues
• Blockchain-driven marketplaces
• Uses and challenges of smart contracts
• Technology and infrastructure issues in Blockchain
• Blockchain and Metaverse
Important Dates for Paper Submission:
June 15, 2023 | 11:59 pm HST: Submission Deadline
August 17, 2023 | 11:59 pm HST: Notification of
Acceptance/Rejection
September 22, 2023|11:59 pm HST: Deadline for Submission of Final
Manuscript for Publication
October 1, 2023 | 11:59 pm HST: Deadline for at least one author
to register for HICSS-57
Minitrack co-chairs:
Marinos Themistocleous (Primary Contact)
University of Nicosia
themistocleous.m@unic.ac.cy
<mailto:themistocleous.m@unic.ac.cy>
Paulo Rupino da Cunha
University of Coimbra
rupino@dei.uc.pt <mailto:rupino@dei.uc.pt>
Maria Papadaki
British University in Dubai
maria.papadaki@buid.ac.ae <mailto:maria.papadaki@buid.ac.ae>
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