[Sigtis-l] CFP HICSS Minitrack Global, International, and Cross-Cultural Issues in IS
Fichman, Pnina
fichman at indiana.edu
Mon May 22 16:38:18 EDT 2017
CFP HICSS Minitrack Global, International, and Cross-Cultural Issues in IS
Hawaii International Conference on Systems Science (HICSS)
January 3-6, 2018, Big Island, Hawaii, USA
http://www.hicss.hawaii.edu/
Papers Due: June 15, 2017
Globalization has historically been tied to technological innovation, and the present era of a networked information society is no different. Information and communication technologies (ICTs) have provided the infrastructure for multinational businesses, created new cultural connections irrespective of geographic boundaries and distances, and allowed an increasingly mobile global population to be connected to their friends, families, and cultures no matter where they are. The issues surrounding global, international, and cross cultural issues in Information Systems (IS) attracted much scholarly attention and have been explored under myriad contexts.
This minitrack focuses on the sociotechnical dynamics and the ways in which the Internet affects people, groups, organizations, and societies. We are in particular interested in the impact of global, international, and cross-cultural issues on ICT development, implementation and use across the globe.
Globalization has historically been tied to technological innovation, and the present era of a networked information society is no different. Information and communication technologies (ICTs) have provided the infrastructure for multinational businesses, created new cultural connections irrespective of geographic boundaries and distances, and allowed an increasingly mobile global population to be connected to their friends, families, and cultures no matter where they are. The issues surrounding global, international, and cross cultural issues in Information Systems (IS) attracted much scholarly attention and have been explored under myriad contexts.
In line with the track recognition that the Internet has transformed the way we work, learn, and play, our minitrack focuses on the sociotechnical dynamics and the ways in which the Internet affects people, groups, organizations, and societies. We are in particular interested in the impact of global, international, and cross-cultural issues on ICT development, implementation and use across the globe.
The minitrack welcomes submissions that relate to all aspects of global IS, or IS research situated in a global, international or cross-cultural context. The minitrack is open to all methodological approaches and perspectives. We are interested in empirical and theoretical work that addresses these and related socio-technical issues.
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
· The impacts of cultural values (e.g. on adaptive user interfaces) on ICT design, adoption, and use.
· The impact of cultural values on policies and practices of big data collection and use (e.g.,
· Cross cultural studies of quantification of self at work, by individuals or organizations
· Cross-cultural comparisons of big data collection and use
· Cross-national and cross-cultural comparisons of ICT adoption, use and development (e.g. Internet diffusion and impacts compared between different economies)
· Effects of global social computing on work organization and practices (e.g. pricing strategies)
· Issues relating to globally distributed teams (e.g. the adoption and use of social media by cross-national virtual teams, worker motivation, and human error diversity)
· Issues relating to Internet adoption and the digital society at the national level (e.g. digital infrastructure sophistication across countries)
· Issues relating to global knowledge management (e.g. different knowledge-sharing cultures in multi-national corporations)
· Issues relating to cross-national legislation and regulation (e.g. implications of different regulations governing Green IT in the EU vs. US or Asian countries)
· Issues relating to global ICT governance (e.g. sustainable strategies for standardization and harmonization in evolving business networks)
· Research on global Cloud sourcing strategies
· Single country studies showing implications for other locations or results different from other contexts (e.g. impact of ICT policies on a transition economy)
· Multi-country studies of ICT adoption, use, and development (e.g. e-commerce adoption involving multiple countries)
· Global impacts of big data on governments, multinational companies, NGOs and other organizations
Minitrack Organizers:
Pnina Fichman, School of Informatics and Computing, Indiana University, Bloomington; fichman at indiana.edu<mailto:fichman at indiana.edu>
Edward W.N. Bernroider, Vienna University of Economics and Business (WU), Institute for Information Management and Control, Vienna, Austria; edward.bernroider at wu.ac.at<mailto:edward.bernroider at wu.ac.at>
Important deadlines for authors:
June 15: Submit full manuscripts for review. Review is double-blind.
Aug 16: Review System emails Acceptance Notices to authors.
September 15: Submission final papers.
Oct 1: Early Registration fee deadline.
Oct 15: Papers without at least one registered author will
be removed from the Proceedings.
------------------------
Pnina Fichman
Professor and Director, Rob Kling Center for Social Informatics
School of Informatics and Computing, Indiana University, Bloomington
http://ella.slis.indiana.edu/~fichman/
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