[AISWorld] Last Cfp: Pre-ECIS workshop IT Artefact Design & Workpractice Intervention – Extended deadline

Göran Goldkuhl goran.goldkuhl at liu.se
Tue Mar 13 10:56:05 EDT 2012


Last Call for papers

A Pre-ECIS and AIS SIG Prag Workshop on
IT Artefact Design & Workpractice Intervention
June 10, 2012, Barcelona

---------- Extended time for submission: April 1 ----------

Invitation

An international workshop for IS scholars interested in one or more of the following related issues:
·         design science research
·         theorizing the IT artefact
·         action research and other intervention strategies
·         theorizing practices and work-systems
·         the use of action-oriented theories in IS
·         practice relevance and usefulness of IS research
·         researcher-practitioner collaboration
·         engaged scholarship
·         practice research
·         pragmatist epistemology

There is a growing interest in IS research for research strategies aiming for design and change. This can be pursued through design science research (Hevner et al, 2004), action research (Davison et al, 2004) or combinations thereof (Sein et al, 2011). Accompanying an interest for the design of IT artefacts is a quest for theorizing the IT artefact (Orlikowski & Iacono, 2001). Improved understanding of IT artefacts is needed in relation to their design, use and evolution. An improved understanding of the context of IT artefacts is needed as well. There is growing interest to theorize the context as practices (Feldman & Orlikowski, 2011; Goldkuhl, 2011) or work-systems (Alter, 2006). This includes an interest for the combined social and material characters of such practices (Orlikowski & Scott, 2008).

The interest for design and change follows the claim for relevance and usefulness of IS research (Benbasat & Zmud, 1999) and the importance of researcher-practitioner collaboration (Mathiassen, 2002). This kind of research orientation have been giving different labels like e.g. engaged scholarship (Van de Ven, 2007; Mathiassen & Nielsen, 2008), mode 2 knowledge production (Nowotny et al, 2001), practice research (Mathiassen, 2002; Goldkuhl, 2011) or practical science (Gregor, 2008). Pivotal in this search for more relevant and useful research is the articulation of supportive, prescriptive and normative knowledge. This can take the form of design theory (Gregor & Jones, 2007) or the broader notion of practical theory (Cronen, 2001; Goldkuhl, 2007).

In order to bring these different threads together we must turn to pragmatist epistemology. There is a re-introduction of pragmatism as a viable research paradigm in some social sciences (Wicks & Freeman, 1998; Fishman, 1999) including information systems (Goles & Hirschheim, 2000; Ågerfalk, 2010; Goldkuhl, 2012) as manifested by the formation of the AIS Special Interest Group on Pragmatist IS Research (SIGPRag) in 2008 (www.sigprag.org). The pragmatist foundations of design science research (Lee & Nickerson, 2010) and action research (Baskerville & Myers, 2004) have also been acknowledged.

Pragmatist epistemology joins together the different threads described above:
·         Knowledge in the making
·         Relevant and useful knowledge
·         Knowledge of actions and practices

The purpose of this workshop is to bring together scholars interested in one or more of these pragmatist threads. This is done in order to weave a pragmatist web to be more powerful in its knowledge generation and use. Theoretical reflections and concrete examples are demanded!

Dates and submission details

Submissions: April 1, 2012 (Extended time!)
Notification: April 30, 2012
Final manuscripts: May 25, 2012
Workshop: June 10, 2012, Barcelona, Spain (just before the 20th European Conference on Information Systems, ECIS-2012)

The workshop website is www.vits.org/adwi/. The workshop will follow an ordinary scientific procedure with submission of papers and selection of papers through peer-review (pursued by an international program committee). Papers are expected to be between 5-15 pages. We welcome full research papers as well as shorter papers (work-in-progress or position papers). Submissions should be sent as e-mail attachments to goran.goldkuhl at liu.se<mailto:goran.goldkuhl at liu.se>. Please use the ECIS format template (can be found at the workshop website). Workshop proceedings will be electronically published and distributed. Selected papers from the workshop will be forwarded to review and publishing in the journal Systems, Signs & Actions (www.sysiac.org).

Workshop co-chairs

Brian Donellan, National University of Ireland Maynooth, Ireland (Brian.Donnellan at nuim.ie)
Göran Goldkuhl, Linköping University (goran.goldkuhl at liu.se<mailto:goran.goldkuhl at liu.se>)

Organisers

AIS Special interest group on Pragmatist IS research (SIG Prag)
Department of Management and Engineering, Linköping University, Sweden
Innovation Value Institute, National University of Ireland Maynooth, Ireland

Programme Committee

Mark Aakhus, USA
Pär Ågerfalk, Sweden
Steven Alter, USA
Michel Avital, Denmark
Karin Axelsson, Sweden
Deborah Bunker, Australia
Dubravka Cecez-Kecmanovic, Australia
Rodney Clarke, Australia
Gabriel Costello, Ireland
Karin Hedström, Sweden
Markus Helfert, Ireland
Ola Henfridsson, Sweden
Jonny Holmström, Sweden
Robert Johnston, Australia
Gustaf Juell-Skielse, Sweden
Mikael Lind, Sweden
Rikard Lindgren, Sweden
Lars-Olof Lychnell, Sweden
Judy McKay, Australia
Angela Nobre, Portugal
Sandeep Purao, USA
Matti Rossi, Finland
Duane Truex, USA
Rajiv Vashist, Australia
John Venable, Australia
Hans Weigand, The Netherlands
Trevor Wood-Harper, UK
Fahri Yetim, Germany

References

Ågerfalk P J (2010) Getting Pragmatic, European Journal of Information Systems, 19(3), 251–256.
Alter S (2006) Work systems and IT artifacts – does the definition matter?, Communications of AIS, Vol. 17, pp 299-313

Baskerville R, Myers M (2004) Special issue on action research in information systems: making IS research relevant to practice – foreword, MIS Quarterly, Vol 28 (3), p 329-335

Benbasat I, Zmud R W (1999) Empirical research in information system research: The practice of relevance, MIS Quarterly, Vol 23 (1), p 3-16

Cronen V (2001) Practical theory, practical art, and the pragmatic-systemic account of inquiry, Communication theory, Vol 11 (1), p 14-35
Davison R M, Martinsons M G, Kock N (2004) Principles of canonical action research, Information Systems Journal, Vol 14, p 65–86

Feldman M, Orlikowski W (2011) Theorizing practice and practicing theory, Organization Science, Vol 22, p 1240-1253

Fishman D B (1999) The case for pragmatic psychology, New York University Press, New York

Goles T, Hirschheim R (2000) The paradigm is dead, the paradigm is dead … long live the paradigm: the legacy of Burell and Morgan, Omega, Vol 28, p 249-268

Goldkuhl G (2007) What does it mean to serve the citizen in e-services? - Towards a practical theory founded in socio-instrumental pragmatism, International Journal of Public Information Systems, Vol 2007 (3), pp 135-159
Goldkuhl G (2011) The research practice of practice research: theorizing and situational inquiry, Systems, Signs & Actions, Vol 5 (1), p 7-29
Goldkuhl G (2012) Pragmatism vs. interpretivism in qualitative information systems research, European Journal of Information Systems, Vol 21 (2), p 135-146

Gregor S (2008) Building theory in a practical science, in Hart D, Gregor S (Eds, 2008) Information Systems Foundations: The role of design science, ANU E Press, Canberra

Gregor S, Jones D (2007) The Anatomy of a Design Theory, Journal of AIS, Vol 8 (5), p 312-335

Hevner A R, March S T, Park J, Ram S (2004) Design science in information systems research, MIS Quarterly, Vol 28 (1), p 75-115

Lee A, Nickerson J (2010) Theory as a Case of Design: Lessons for Design from the Philosophy of Science, Proc of the 43rd Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences

Mathiassen L (2002) Collaborative practice research, Information Technology & People, Vol 15 (4), p 321-345

Mathiassen L, Nielsen P A (2008) Engaged Scholarship in IS Research. The Scandinavian Case, Scandinavian Journal of Information Systems, Vol 20 (2), p 3–20

Nowotny H, Scott P, Gibbons M (2001) Re-thinking science. Knowledge and the public in an age of uncertainty, Polity, Cambridge

Orlikowski W J, Iacono C S (2001) Research commentary: Desperately seeking the “IT” in IT research – a call to theorizing the IT artefact, Information Systems Research, Vol 12 (2), pp 121-134

Orlikowski W J, Scott S V (2008) Sociomateriality: Challenging the Separation of Technology, Work and Organization, The Academy of Management Annals, Vol 2(1), p 433-474

Sein M, Henfridsson O, Purao S, Rossi M, Lindgren R (2011) Action design research, MIS Quarterly, Vol 35 (1), p 37-56

Van de Ven A (2007) Engaged scholarship: A guide for organizational and social research, Oxford University Press, Oxford

Wicks A C, Freeman R E (1998) Organization studies and the new pragmatism: Positivism, anti-positivism, and the search for ethics, Organization Science, Vol 9 (2), p 123-140
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