-------- Forwarded Message -------- Subject: [AISWorld] FINAL CFP: Information Security Management and Privacy Track - Australasian Conference on Information Systems Date: Wed, 24 Jul 2019 21:59:51 +0000 From: Sean Maynard sean.maynard@unimelb.edu.au To: aisworld@lists.aisnet.org aisworld@lists.aisnet.org CC: Nik Thompson nik.thompson@curtin.edu.au, Sean Maynard sean.maynard@unimelb.edu.au, Atif Ahmad atif@unimelb.edu.au, Calic, Dragana Dragana.Calic@dst.defence.gov.au
FINAL Call for Papers - Information Security and Privacy Track: 30th Australasian Conference on Information Systems (ACIS 2019) https://www.acis2019.org/, PERTH, AUSTRALIA
IMPORTANT DATES:
2nd August - Paper Submission (Full and Research in Progress papers) 27th September - Paper Acceptance 25th October - Camera-Ready versions of accepted Full and RIP papers 9th - 11th December - ACIS2019 Conference
CONFERENCE THEME: Making the World a Better Place with Information Systems While the discipline of Information Systems arose within the field of Business and Management and much of the research in Information Systems has a business emphasis, it has grown to become both multidisciplinary and transdisciplinary providing insights into and encompassing research in many other fields, including computer science, design, engineering, psychology, and sociology As research and knowledge in information systems and other disciplines have progressed, businesses have achieved unprecedented levels of productivity and profit. Many of the benefits of these developments have also flowed to the public in terms of employment, new products, lower prices, and taxes paid to government. Similarly, the production of food is at an all-time high and its distribution continues to improve. Information systems can be developed, deployed, and used in myriad ways to transform and impact positively on the world for everyone, not just for businesses, for their owners, or for regions of relative wealth. The theme of this conference is to explore new ways to use information systems and information technology to improve social conditions and all of the areas that doing so entails, including reducing poverty, hunger, war, and oppression and improving the quality of working life, health, education, equality, freedom, and emancipation.
Information Security Management and Privacy Track Whilst, research and knowledge in information systems and other disciplines have progressed and businesses have achieved unprecedented levels of productivity and profit, security attacks in terms of frequency, scale, diversity and seriousness are happening at unprecedented levels. As the theme of this conference is to "explore new ways to use information systems and information technology to improve social conditions and all of the areas that doing so entails", the Information Security Management and Privacy track will focus on how we can help organisations and society protect themselves in light of these new information systems developments. Attacks on these new systems will still come from outside as well as within organisational boundaries, can be malicious, or may be accidental. Additionally, as information and knowledge is being collected and analysed more frequently by organisations, unauthorized access and leakage is a serious problem for organisations. The use of the internet of things, mobile devices and the like further exacerbates these issues. A number of controls are used to attempt to mitigate these issues including policies, strategies, training and technological controls. This track welcomes empirical and rich theoretical papers that provide interesting insights on these and other issues in the IS sphere from an information security management and privacy perspective. In particular, we welcome papers that furnish new and creative approaches to understanding the modern threat landscape, via new theoretical lenses, innovative practical contexts, and novel data analysis techniques. The track welcomes design science, empirical, economic, managerial, behavioural, and theoretical submissions across a diverse range of topics-from technical management aspects to broader social and managerial issues at the individual, organizational, or societal levels. We invite theoretical perspectives from behavioural, organizational, cognitive, cultural, socio-technical, or other lenses for analysis of these issues.
Topics of Interest Topics include, but are not limited to, the following aspects of IS security and privacy:
* Adoption, use, and continuance of information security technologies and policies * Costs and benefits of information security and privacy * Cross-cultural issues in IS security and privacy * Cyberwarfare and cybersecurity * Design and development of information security and privacy enhancing technologies * Digital forensics, testing and incident investigations; * Identity management for individuals and organisations; * Incident response and investigations of security violations * Information security policy development and impact * Information security strategy and governance * Intrusion detection/prevention * IT audit and controls * Knowledge Leakage * Legal, societal, and ethical issues in IS security and privacy * Risk analysis and management, risk and fraud assessment * Security and privacy concerning social media, social networking, big data, the IOT or mobile devices * Security and privacy metrics * Security Analytics * Security, Education, Training, and Awareness (SETA) programs and campaigns * Social engineering and human risks, including the role of employees and customers; * Theoretical and empirical analyses of information security behaviours and on information, user and customer privacy;
Track Chairs Sean Maynard & Atif Ahmad (University of Melbourne) Dragana Calic (Defense Science and Technology Group)
Sean ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Dr Sean Maynard | Course Director, Master of Information Systems (MIS) : CRICOS: 055847J For information on the MIS please refer to Master of Information Sytems For information about course planning please refer to Course Planning Location Details: Level 10, Room 21, Doug McDonell Building
School of Computing and Information Systems, Melbourne School of Engineering, The University of Melbourne, Victoria, 3010.
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