Track: Strategic and Competitive Use of
Information Technology
Mini track: Strategic Use of IS and IT in
Non-Profits and Social Enterprises
Mini-Track Co-Chairs:
Richelle L. Oakley,
rloakle3@uncg.edu,
The University of North Carolina at Greensboro
A. F. Salam,
amsalam@uncg.edu,
The University of North Carolina at Greensboro
Lakshmi Iyer,
lsiyer@uncg.edu.
The University of North Carolina at Greensboro
Kathy White Loyd,
kwloyd@uncg.edu,
The University of North Carolina at Greensboro
We invite the submission of papers to the IS in
Non-profits and Social Enterprises Mini-track at the
20th Americas Conference on Information Systems
(AMCIS), which will be held on August 7-10, 2014 in
Savannah, Georgia.
Many organizations operate with a primary mission to
serve the common good. Non-profit organizations,
such as charities, focus on impacting the root
causes of social problems in communities. Social
enterprises aim to improve human well-being using
traditional business methods and commercial
strategies. These organizations focus on
long-lasting social issues such as poverty,
homelessness, education inequality, financial
instability, lack of healthcare access and
knowledge, etc. Both non-profits and social
enterprises have various constraints that impact
technology adoption, diffusion, and utilization
towards efforts in achieving their strategic goals.
Examples include regulatory issues, heavy reliance
on volunteer staff, limited finances, etc.
Interestingly, given these salient factors, there
has been minimal research that focuses on the
strategic use of technology within these
organization types.
There is significant potential to examine and
improve how these organization types harness the
power of information systems (IS) and technology
(IT) to accelerate social impact. It is essential
to focus on IS/IT utilization within non-profit and
social enterprise organizations in order to continue
developing a more in-depth understanding of
strategic use and impact of IS/IT within these
organizations. This mini-track solicits completed
and research-in-progress papers addressing IS/IT
issues in non-profits or social enterprises. Papers
can be conceptual, theoretical, design, empirical,
or case studies.
Situated in non-profit or social enterprise
organizations, topics of interest include, but are
not limited to:
* Design, development, deployment, and use or
utilization of IS/IT
* Intra- and inter-organizational IS/IT issues
* Individual attitudes, behaviors, or
characteristics that impact strategic use of IS/IT
* Multiple stakeholder perspectives on IS/IT issues
* IS/IT governance or policy issues
* Evaluation and assessment of IS/IT impact on
organizational performance
* Social media, networking, and analytics
* Business intelligence and related tools
* Innovative and novel IS/IT applications
Important dates:
January 4, 2014: Manuscript submissions open
March 1, 2014: Manuscript submission deadline at
11:59pm EST, Savannah time
April 4, 2014: Author notification
April 18, 2014: Authors revisions due
April 25, 2014: Authors final, camera-ready papers
due
Instructions for authors can be found at
http://amcis2014.aisnet.org/index.php/call-for-papers.
If you have any questions regarding the topic or
would like additional guidance, please send an
email to the mini-track chairs.