-------- Original Message -------- Subject: [AISWorld] 2nd CfP AMCIS 2013: Information Systems for Sustainable Business Activities and Supply Chains Date: Fri, 8 Feb 2013 17:15:22 +0000 From: Dao, Viet VTDao@ship.edu To: aisworld@lists.aisnet.org aisworld@lists.aisnet.org
*CALL FOR PAPERS*
19th Americas Conference on Information Systems Chicago, Illinois, August 15-17, 2013
*Track:* Green IS and Sustainability *Mini-track:* Information Systems for Sustainable Business Activities and Supply Chains
*Abstract:* This mini-track focuses on the role of Information Systems in enabling the development and promotion of sustainability strategy and sustainable business practices that focus on all aspects of the triple bottom line: Profit, People, and Planet. More particularly, this mini-track is interested in research regarding the role of IS in enabling sustainable business practices that not only address sustainability within individual firms but also reach beyond firm boundary to examine the role of IS in enabling coordination among supply chain partners to develop more sustainable business practices across supply chains.
*Description of Main Theme and Potential Topics:* Sustainability has increasingly become important to business research and practice over the past decades as a result of rapid depletion of natural resources and concerns over wealth disparity and corporate social responsibility. Sustainability research and practices have recognized that business performance should be evaluated based on its impacts on the environment and interested stakeholders besides profitability, known as the triple bottom line (TBL). Companies have increasingly recognized that business strategy that boldly embrace sustainability have resulted in companies? being successful in delivering financial, environmental, and social values to themselves as well as related stakeholders (MIT Sloan Management Review report, 2011). In order to develop capabilities to address TBL issues, businesses need to engage in wide ranging activities such as changing business culture, redesigning business processes, etc. (Hart & Milstein, 2003; Porter & Kramer, 2006). More importantly, research as well as management practice have illustrated that to be truly sustainable, companies should not only just focus on their own business operations but also focus on improving sustainable business practices across the supply chain (Kleindorfer, Singhal, & Van Wassenhove, 2005; Dao, Langella, & Carbo, 2011). Given the recognized role of IT resources in enabling business capabilities within and across supply chain partners (Rai, Patnayakuni, & Seth, 2006; Jain, Wadhwa, & Deshmukh, 2009), it is arguable that IT resources should be critical in enabling firms to develop capabilities to address sustainability issues both within firms and across their supply chain through coordination with supply chain partners (Melville, 2010; Dao et al., 2011). We invite research from different business areas, including MIS, management, supply chain and operation management, and particularly inter-disciplinary research that examines the role of IT resources in conjunction with other business resources in enabling firms to develop sustainability strategy that address all aspects of the triple bottom line, both within firms and across supply chain partners. Topics of interest include, but not limited to: - IS in enabling sustainable innovation - Intertwining of environmentally and socially sustainable practices - IS in enabling environmentally and socially sustainable operations (including direct environmental impact of data centers, power consumption and conservation, etc.) - IS in supply chain partners? coordination for sustainability - Sustainability vision within and across firms - The role of IS in enabling the assessment of sustainability performance
*IMPORTANT DATES* Feb 22, 2013 Paper submissions deadline 11:59 p.m. Central Time April 17-19, 2013 Notification of paper acceptance May 9, 2013 Camera-ready copy of accepted papers due
Instructions for authors and more information about the conference is available on the conference website at http://amcis2013.aisnet.org/.
*Mini-track chairs contact information:* Viet Dao
vtdao@ship.edu mailto:vtdao@ship.edu
Jerry Carbo
jacarbo@ship.edu mailto:jacarbo@ship.edu
Ian Langella
imlangella@ship.edu mailto:imlangella@ship.edu
Steve Haase
sjhaas@ship.edu mailto:sjhaas@ship.edu
Shippensburg University of Pennsylvania
Shippensburg, PA 17257
*References* Dao, V., Langella, I., & Carbo, J. (2011) From green to sustainability: InformationTechnology and an Integrated Sustainability Framework. Journal of Strategic Information Systems, 20(1), 63-79. Hart, S., & Milstein, M. B. (2003). Creating Sustainable Value. Academy of Management Executive, 17, 56-67. Jain, V, Wadhwa, S, & Deshmukh, S. G. (2009). Revisiting information systems to support a dynamic supply chain: issues and prospective. Production Planning & Control, 20, 17-29. Kleindorfer, P.R., Singhal, K., & Van Wassenhove, L.N. (2005). Sustainable Operations Management. Production and Operations Management, 14, 482-492. Melville, N. (2010) Information Systems Innovation for Environmental Sustainability. MIS Quarterly, 34(1), 1-21. MIT Sloan Management Review report (2011) Sustainability: The ?Embracers? Seize Advantage. http://sloanreview.mit.edu/feature/sustainability-advantage/ Porter, M., & Kramer, M. (2006) Strategy & Society: The Link Between Competitive Advantage and Corporate Social Responsibility. Harvard Business Review, 84(12),78-92. Rai, A., Patnayakuni, R., & Seth, N. (2006). Firm Performance Impacts of Digitally Enabled Supply Chain Integration Capabilities. MIS Quarterly, 30, 225-246.
Viet T. Dao, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Management Information Systems Grove College of Business Shippensburg University 1871 Old Main Drive, GRH315 Shippensburg, PA 17257 Office: (717) 477-1415 E-mail: vtdao@ship.edu