[Sighfis-l] CFP: Journal of Information Technology Special Issue: Why History Matters
Kathryn La Barre
kathryn.labarre at gmail.com
Thu Apr 28 13:55:00 EDT 2011
Call for Papers for a Special Issue of
Journal of Information Technology
Information Systems: Why History Matters
Senior Editors:
Antony Bryant
Alistair Black
Frank Land
Jaana Porra
Any discipline or field of professional practice has a history. A proper
understanding of the discipline needs to be based on a widespread awareness
of that history. The field of information systems (IS) is no different in
this regard. As the IS field matures, it needs to evolve a historical
perspective on its own subject matter.
Although there has been some significant work within IS studies that relies
upon and uses historical data, there is little by way of information
historiography to guide further work and future research. This is ironic
given that information systems themselves are now the fons et origo of
contemporary (richly demonstrated by the recent WIKILEAKS affair) and future
archives. In addition, there is significant reliance upon case studies, and
other forms of historical narrative, in IS research and general IS
literature. So it is essential that those working within IS studies
understand the role and nature of archives and other historical sources,
both in terms of a resource for research into information history, and as a
topic for discussion amongst archivists, historians, and other information
and information system researchers and professionals: Also developing an
awareness of the processes underlying the development of archives as social
artefacts.
The interest in producing IS history encompasses many disciplines and
varying perspectives on IS. The IS discipline itself is closely related to
other disciplines or research domains, such as information studies,
information science, library history, organizational studies, business
studies, software engineering (including requirements engineering), HCI, AI,
CAD/CAM, criminology, social studies, behavioural sciences, economics and
communication studies – although all too often these links are ignored or
simply forgotten. In so doing, the IS community is missing an opportunity to
engage with, and learn from, others with differing perspectives on topics of
common interest. Furthermore, this engenders an uneasy feeling that many
current IS issues and concerns might be at least partially resolved with a
better knowledge and understanding of ‘information history’ in its broadest
sense.
The purpose of this special issue is to provide a broad based platform for
an IS historical discourse. Thus, we welcome contributions from all fields
that are concerned with the IS subject matter. While many aspects and areas
of IS studies rely on historical data, evidence and archives, the common
goal is to produce a body of IS history. In this spirit, we invite
contributions on a variety of topics related to IS history. Such topics may
touch upon fundamental philosophical questions such as: What is IS history?
At a more practical level, they may include areas such as:
- the development of information history as a multidisciplinary research
effort
- an analysis of historical approaches and methods and what these can
provide for the IS researcher
- the existence of primary sources for IS history, and associated
problems of access and methodology
- the nature of the archive
- good examples of the use of historiographic approaches to IS studies
- previously unpublished histories
- the study of the evolution of the IS disciplines
- how the boundaries of the discipline were set and defined
- the study of the evolution of IS organization, practice and management,
including such practices as outsourcing
- the study of the evolution of the IS profession
- the study of the evolution of the role of information systems and
professionals in organizations
- the study of the evolution of IS design methodologies
- the study of evolution of IS applications
- exploring the management of change
- the importance of understanding the pre-history of IS as currently
defined, including continuities or contrasts with earlier pre-computer
phases, technologies and systems
- the study of IS innovation and diffusion including: stages of growth
models; the study of IS success and failure; use and policies around public
and private archives
- information archives in the age of Freedom of Information legislation,
PR and spin
- the use of history as an instrument for understanding the present and
planning the future; and the consequent dangers of ‘presentism’
- the inevitability of the ‘double hermeneutic’ in unravelling the
historical record
ASSOCIATE EDITORS
Frank Bannister, Trinity College, Dublin
Rudy Hirschheim, Distinguished Professor of Information Systems at the EJ
Ourso College of Business Administration at Louisiana State University, USA
Nathalie Mitev, Department of Information Systems, LSE, UK
Neil Pollock, Reader in e-business, University of Edinburgh, UK
Neil Ramiller Professor of Management, School of Business Administration,
Portland State University
Boyd Rayward, Professor Emeritus, University of Illinois, USA
Burt Swanson, Professor and Area Chair for Information Systems at the UCLA
Anderson School, USA
Toni Weller, Visiting Research Fellow in History, Department of Historical
and Social Studies, De Montfort University, UK
DEADLINES & SUBMISSION INSTRUCTIONS
Information about JIT, including formatting requirements, can be found at
http://www.palgrave-journals.com/jit/index.html
Questions about the special issue can be directed to Tony Bryant [
a.bryant at leedsmet.ac.uk]
Papers should be submitted to JIT [JITedoffice at lse.ac.uk] with the title of
the Special Issue in the Subject Line.
Timetable:
December 31 2011 Articles submitted
July 31 2012 Reviews returned to authors
October 31 2012 Revised version of articles due
December 31 2012 Final papers selected
June 2013 Publication of Special Issue
--
Kathryn La Barre
Assistant Professor
Graduate School of Library and Information Science
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
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