-------- Forwarded Message --------
Subject: [WI] CfP: Home Office: Working from a Private Place; Special Issue BISE-Journal
Date: Sat, 15 May 2021 10:12:47 +0000
From: Müller, Claudia, Prof. Dr. <Claudia.Mueller@uni-siegen.de>
Reply-To: Müller, Claudia, Prof. Dr. <Claudia.Mueller@uni-siegen.de>
To: wi@lists.kit.edu <wi@lists.kit.edu>


+++ apologies for cross-posting+++

 

1 Call topic: Home Office: Working from a Private Place

Special Issue of BISE-Journal http://www.bise-journal.com/?p=1938

 

The availability of digital technologies offers the opportunity to reshape work and life.  In particular, the traditional spatial and temporal restrictions for workspaces are increasingly being reduced. Even beyond COVID-19, many office employees will continue to work, at least partly, from home. Although the degree of virtualization will continue to increase, a combination of physical and virtual presence can be expected. Hybrid forms of working will become part of our future private and professional life.

Working from home goes hand in hand with great potential, but at the same time also with risks. Recent experiences with home schooling and home office have triggered intensive discussions on potential positive and negative outcomes of co-locating work with private and schooling activities. There is a need to design digital technologies appropriately to support individuals, groups and organizations in ways that increase productivity and wellbeing. Thus, pursuing a socio-technical paradigm for understanding and designing for the home office is essential. The fields of Information Systems (IS), Computer-Supported Cooperative Work (CSCW), and Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) have a long tradition in designing from a socio-technical perspective. Building on this tradition, we believe that existing work practices in the home office need to be analyzed and understood more intensively.  Digital technologies must be designed and tailored to fit into the complexities of the home office.  New descriptive and prescriptive knowledge must be provided to fully leverage the potential of working from home.

This special issue welcomes a diversity of submissions and is hence open for empirical, design-oriented, and conceptual research focusing on working from home. Manuscripts may employ qualitative, quantitative, engineering, mixed methods, or innovative research designs. They may address the individual, group or organizational level.

Thus, topics may include, but are not limited to, the following areas:

 

All submissions should cover digital aspects of working from home and open the "black box" of information technology (i.e., shed light on specific aspects of the applied IT artifacts).

2 Submission Guidelines

 

Please submit your paper by 1 December 2021, via BISE’s online submission system (https://www.editorialmanager.com/buis/). Please observe the instructions on manuscript formatting and length. Submission guidelines and general author guidelines are available at http://www.bise-journal.com/author_guidelines.

 

Each submission will be reviewed anonymously (double-blind process) by at least two referees with respect to its relevance, originality, and research quality. In addition to the editors of the special issue, distinguished international scholars will be involved in the review process as associate editors.

3 Schedule

 

 

4 Editors and Associate Editors

 

Editors

Mark Ackerman, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA

Alexander Maedche, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), Karlsruhe, Germany

Claudia Mueller, University of Siegen, Siegen, Germany (corresponding author, e-mail: claudia.mueller@uni-siegen.de)

Gerhard Schwabe, University of Zuerich, Zuerich, Switzerland

Volker Wulf, University of Siegen, Siegen, Germany

 

Associate Editors

Nina Boulus-Rødje, Roskilde University, Roskilde, Denmark

Mateusz Dolata, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland

Kathrin Figl, University of Innsbruck, Austria

Janine Hacker, University of Liechtenstein, Liechtenstein

Christiane Lehrer, Copenhagen Business School, Denmark

Thomas Ludwig, University of Siegen, Siegen, Germany

Fabiano Pinatti, University of Siegen, Siegen, Germany

Alexander Richter, Victoria University Wellington, Wellington, New Zealand

Kai Riemer, University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia

Chiara Rossito, Stockholm University, Stockholm, Sweden

Isabella Seeber, Grenoble Ecole de Management, France

 

 

 

 

 

Prof. Dr. Claudia Müller

 

Ass. Prof. Information Systems, esp. IT for the Ageing Society

Institute for Information Systems

Office US-F 115, Kohlbettstr. 15, 57072 Siegen

T +49 271 740 4036 (Sekr.), email: claudia.mueller@uni-siegen.de  

https://italg.wineme.uni-siegen.de/

 

Professor at Kalaidos University of Applied Sciences Switzerland

Department of Health Sciences/ Careum Research

Pestalozzistr. 3, CH-8032 Zürich, www.careum.ch

 


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