10 – 12 April 2017,Budapest, Hungary
IS in Practice, Technology Infrastructures and Organisational Processes– Power, Cultural, Behavioural and Political issues – New Organisational Forms – Dilution of Organisational Boundaries – The centrality of IS and IT in Organisational Processes – IS Management – Information Management – Knowledge Management – IS and SMEs – Innovation and IS – Innovation and Knowledge Management – IS and Change Management – IS and Organisation Development – Enterprise Application Integration – Enterprise Resource Planning – Business Process Change | IS Design, Development and Management Issues and Methodologies– Design and Development Methodologies and Frameworks – Iterative and Incremental Methodologies – Agile Methodologies – IS Design and Development as a Component-Based Process – IS Design and Development as Social Negotiation Process – IS D Design and Development as a Global and Distributed Process – Outsourcing in IS – Outsourcing Risks, Barriers and Opportunities – IS Project Management – IS Quality Management and Assurance – IS Standards and Compliance Issues – Risk Management in IS – Risk Management in IS Design and Development |
IS Professional Issues– Ethical, social, privacy, security and moral issues in an e-society – The role of information in the information society – Myths, taboos and misconceptions in IS – Practitioner and Research Relationship, Projects and Links – Validity, Usefulness and Applicability of IS Academic Research – Industrial Research versus Academic Research Issues – Industry Innovation and Leadership and Academic Laggards – IS consultancy as a profession – Organisational IS Roles – Communities of practice and Knowledge SharingIS Learning and Teaching– Patterns of Demand for IS Teaching Provision – Fads, Fashions and Fetishes in IS Curricula – Pedagogic practice in Teaching IS – E-Learning in IS – Instructional Design for IS – National Cultures and Approaches to Pedagogy – Multiculturality and Diversity Issues in IS Learning and Teaching | IS Research– Core Theories, Conceptualisations and Paradigms in IS Research – Ontological Assumptions in IS Research – IS Research Constraints, Limitations and Opportunities – IS vs Computer Science Research – IS vs Business Studies – Positivist, Interpretivist and Critical Approaches to IS Research – Quantitative vs. Qualitative Methods – Deductive vs Inductive Approaches – Multi-method Approaches and Triangulations in IS Research – Design Research and the Sciences of the Artificial in IS – Multidisciplinary Views and Multi Methodological Approaches – New and alternative approaches to IS research – Examples of experimental research designs in IS |
No comments:
Post a Comment