[AISWorld] Cfp Pre-ICIS SIGPRAG workshop “Practice-based Design and Innovation of Digital Artifacts”

Göran Goldkuhl goran.goldkuhl at liu.se
Thu Aug 24 02:47:33 EDT 2017


Call for Papers

AIS SIGPrag Pre-ICIS workshop on
”Practice-based Design and Innovation of Digital Artifacts”

December 9, 2017, Seoul, South Korea

Background – pragmatic perspectives

There have been many calls in the information systems (IS) community for a stronger pragmatic focus. This can be seen in a growing interest for research approaches and methods in IS that emphasize contribution to practice and collaboration between the practice and academia. Action research, which aims for knowledge development through collaboration and intervention in real settings, is achieving more and more academic credibility (Baskerville & Myers, 2004; Davison et al, 2004). This can also be said about design science research that aims for the generation of new and useful artifacts (Hevner et al, 2004; Gregor & Jones, 2007). Research through evaluation has had a long and venerable place in IS research (Ward et, 1996; Serafeimidis & Smithson, 2003). Several approaches and frameworks that combine or integrate elements from the above-mentioned approaches have also emerged, e.g. practice research (Goldkuhl, 2011), collaborative practice research (Mathiassen, 2002), practical science (Gregor, 2008), engaged scholarship (Mathiassen & Nielsen, 2008), action design research (Sein et al, 2011) and technical action research (Wieringa & Morali, 2012). Underlying these different approaches is a quest for practical relevance of the conducted research (Benbasat & Zmud, 1999; Van de Ven, 2007; Wieringa, 2010). It is not enough to only “mirror” the world through descriptions and explanations but a pragmatic orientation recognizes intervention and design as a way of knowing and a means for building knowledge about social and institutional phenomena (Aakhus, 2007). There is a need for knowledge of other epistemic kinds that contributes more clearly to the improvement of IS practices.

A pragmatic orientation can also be seen in the increasing interest in the conceptualization of practices, activities, agency and actions. Practice theorizing has gained an increased attention in IS studies (Orlikowski, 2008; Leonardi, 2011). There has been an interest for agency and action oriented theories in IS for quite some time; e.g. activity theory (Nardi, 1996), structuration theory (Orlikowski, 1992), social action theorizing (Hirschheim et al, 1996), human agency theorizing (Boudreau & Robey, 2005) and language action perspective (Winograd & Flores, 1986). From this follows also an interest for social and pragmatic views of the IT artifact (Aakhus & Jackson, 2005). This includes views of the IT artifact as contextually embedded and carriers of those social contexts (Orlikowski & Iacono, 2001) and such artifacts being tools for action and communication (Ågerfalk, 2003; Markus & Silver, 2008). Design research practice and the contributions to practice through appropriation of knowledge and methods and the contributions to academia through knowledge artifacts has been discussed (Sjöström, Donnellan & Helfert, 2012).

This enhanced practice and action orientation follows a growing awareness within IS scholars towards pragmatism as a research foundation (e.g. Goles & Hirschheim, 2000; Ågerfalk, 2010; Goldkuhl, 2012). It is not the case that IS scholars suddenly become pragmatists in their research orientation. It is rather the case that there is move from an implicit pragmatism to an explicit one (Goldkuhl, 2012). For a long time IS scholars have addressed practical problems with an interest for improvement. That interest has led to the extensive development of methods, models and constructive frameworks for not only the design of IT artifacts, but also related to several other IS/IT phenomena like e.g. innovation management, business process management, project management, IT service management just to mention a few. These methods actually reveal an on-going search for knowledge of other epistemic kinds for advancing understanding of information technology, information systems, and practice. Pragmatism – and its inherent view of inquiry as a theory of knowledge (Dewey, 1938) – is a philosophical foundation for intervention-based research (Baskerville & Myers, 2004; Sjöström, 2010). Indeed, Constantinides et al (2012, p. 1) propose “practical questions for all IS researchers to consider in making choices about relevant topics, design and execution, and representation of findings in their research.” The pragmatist foundations are also reflected in the evolving design science research discourse (Hevner et al, 2004; Sein et al, 2011; Gregor & Hevner, 2013; Iivari, 2014; Venable et al, 2016).



Workshop focus

This AIS SIGPrag Pre-ICIS workshop has a general orientation towards pragmatic perspectives on IS as described above. The focus is on “Practice-based Design and Innovation of Digital Artifacts”. This means an emphasis on digital artifacts as embedded in social practices and carriers of elements in such practices. It emphasizes also the innovative nature of designing new artifacts and new practices. The workshop acknowledges different sub-themes within this broad workshop theme:

  *   Ways to research practice-based design and innovation of digital artifacts
  *   Ways to conceptualize and describe practices
  *   Ways to conceptualize and describe digital artifacts
  *   The processes of innovation and design of digital artifacts and practices



Topics within these sub-themes are described below.



Workshop purpose



This workshop is arranged in the same spirit and a continuation of earlier successful SIGPrag workshops on “Practice research”, “IT Artifact Design & Workpractice Improvement” and “Action Research & Design Research Integrations”.



This SIGPrag workshop intends to bring scholars and practitioners together for a knowledge exchange and development on research foundations and practical contributions concerning the design and innovation of digital artifacts and practices. The SIGPrag workshop is intended to be a developmental arena with thoughtful and constructive feedback from reviews and comments on site. The workshop should be a place where you can present ideas in papers and get fruitful feedback for further development of the papers. A developmental arena means also taking responsibility for pushing contributions further to high-quality journal publications. From earlier SIGPrag workshops (ADWI-2012, ADWI-2013, ADWI-2014 and PractDID-2016) several papers have been pushed further into special issues in the open access journal Systems, Signs & Actions. At least one issue will be arranged in Systems, Signs & Actions inviting promising papers from this SIGPrag workshop. We will possibly also work with some other outlet for another special issue. This depends on the outcome of the workshop.



Topics



The workshop can include papers from diverse fields of IS. Topics following the identified workshop sub-themes are listed below.



Ways to research practice-based design and innovation of digital artifacts; empirical research approaches such as:

  *   Practice research
  *   Action research
  *   Design science research
  *   Action design research
  *   Case study research
  *   Evaluation research
  *   Discourse analysis
  *   Pragmatic inquiries
  *   Practitioner – research collaborations

Ways to research practice-based design and innovation of digital artifacts; knowledge creation approaches such as:

  *   Design theory development
  *   Method design/refinement
  *   Grounded theory development
  *   Multi-grounded theory development
  *   Practical theory development

Ways to conceptualize and describe practices; for example:

  *   Symbolic interaction
  *   Language action
  *   Socio-materiality
  *   Institutionalism
  *   Actor-networks
  *   Infrastructure evolution
  *   Socio-instrumentalism
  *   Distributed cognition
  *   Distributed agency



Ways to conceptualize and describe digital artifacts; for example:

  *   Ensemble view
  *   Socio-technical view
  *   Contextual view
  *   Functional tool view
  *   Affordance view
  *   Communicative action view

The processes of innovation and design of digital artifacts and practices; for example aspects such as:

  *   Innovation strategies
  *   Openness in innovation
  *   Design thinking
  *   Collaborative design
  *   Stakeholder interactions (power-playing vs. value balancing and informed consensus building)
  *   Practice understanding and diagnosis
  *   Wicked problems
  *   Problem formulation
  *   Values and goals articulation
  *   Idea generation
  *   Idea capture
  *   Design conversations
  *   Idea visualization (modeling, prototyping)
  *   Strategies for testing and evaluation



Dates and submission details



Submissions: September 24, 2017

Notification: October 31, 2017

Final manuscripts: November 30, 2017

Workshop: December 9, 2017



The workshop website is http://SIGPrag.net/<http://sigprag.net/>. 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 5-16 pages. We welcome full research papers as well as shorter papers (work-in-progress or position papers). For submissions we use the EasyChair system (https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=practdid2017). A format template can be found at the workshop website (http://SIGPrag.net/<http://sigprag.net/>). Workshop proceedings will be electronically published and distributed. There will be a small workshop fee covering catering.





Workshop co-chairs



Jonas Sjöström, Uppsala University, Sweden (jonas.sjostrom at im.uu.se<mailto:jonas.sjostrom at im.uu.se>)

Göran Goldkuhl, Linköping University & Uppsala University, Sweden (goran.goldkuhl at liu.se<mailto:goran.goldkuhl at liu.se>)

Markus Helfert, Dublin City University, Ireland (Markus.Helfert at dcu.ie<mailto:Markus.Helfert at dcu.ie>)

Jaehyun Park, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan (park.j.ai at m.titech.ac.jp<mailto:park.j.ai at m.titech.ac.jp>)



Organisers



AIS Special interest group on Pragmatic IS research (AIS SIGPrag), http://SIGPrag.net/<http://sigprag.net/>




Programme Committee

Mark Aakhus, USA
Pär Ågerfalk, Sweden
Stephan Aier, Switzerland
Steven Alter, USA
Michel Avital, Denmark
Lars Bækgaard, Denmark
Patrick Brandtner, Austria
Rodney Clarke, Australia
Gabriel Costello, Ireland
Stefan Cronholm, Sweden
Brian Donnellan, Ireland
Ulrich Frank, Germany
Matt Germonprez, USA
Rob Gleasure, Ireland
Shirley Gregor, Australia
Amir Haj-Bolouri, Sweden
Ola Henfridsson, UK
Paul Johannesson, Sweden
Gustaf Juell-Skielse, Sweden
Jenny Lagsten, Sweden
Kalle Lyytinen, USA
Ulf Melin, Sweden
Tadhg Nagle, Ireland
Peter Axel Nielsen, Denmark
Jan Pries-Heje, Denmark
Matti Rossi, Finland
Hannes Rothe, Germany
Gerhard Schwabe, Switzerland
Hans Weigand, the Netherlands
Robert Winter, Switzerland

More members to be announced.

References


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Aakhus M, Jackson S (2005) Technology, Interaction and Design. In K. Fitch & B. Sanders (Eds.), Handbook of Language and Social Interaction (pp. 411–433). Lawrence Erlbaum, Mahwah, NJ

Ågerfalk P J (2003) Information Systems Actability: Understanding Information Technology as a Tool for Business Action and Communication, Ph D diss, Department of Computer and Information Science, Linköping University
Ågerfalk P J (2010) Getting Pragmatic, European Journal of Information Systems, Vol 19 (3), pp 251–256
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
Boudreau M-C, Robey D (2005) Enacting Integrated Information Technology: A Human Agency Perspective, Organization Science, Vol 16 (1), p 3–18
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