This volume examines the progress made in the field of Information Systems in recent years in and presents a forward-looking perspective that can help to shape future scholarly conversations both in the field of Information Systems but also in cognate fields where information technology is having profound effects.
The field of Information Systems has been evolving since the first application of computers in organizations in the early 1950s. Focusing on information systems analysis and design up to and including the 1980s, the field has expanded enormously, with our assumptions about information and knowledge being challenged, along with both intended and unintended consequences of information technology.
This second edition takes stock of the progress made in recent years and presents a forward-looking perspective that can help to shape future scholarly conversations both in the field of Information Systems but also in cognate fields where information technology is having profound effects. With the advances in digital technology, such as artificial intelligence, the internet of things, cloud computing, blockchain, green tech and the like, we herald a digital era and can envision a shift and a need for new logics – “new ways of thinking” and new ways of engaging with digital technology now and in the near future. As compared to the four themes in the previous edition, this book introduces a fifth theme on “Digital Phenomena” to specifically attend to contemporary issues and what is a pertinent agenda for future research. This prestige reference work offers students and researchers a critical reflection on major topics and current scholarship in this evolving field, with each chapter providing a balanced overview of current knowledge, identifying issues and discussing relevant debates.
This book is required reading for any student or researcher concerned not just with the broad - and expanding - field of Management Information Systems per se but all those in cognate disciplines interested in the impacts, management and use of modern information technologies in organisations and modern society, whether it be Strategy, Organizational Behaviour, Marketing, Sociology, or the like. This single-volume repository deals not just with the current state of knowledge, the current debates and the extant literature, but also with questions concerning emerging management concerns and implications of the fast-changing world of digital technologies.
Part I: Disciplinary Theoretical and Methodological Foundations
1.
Introduction
2. The explosion of scope for information systems research
3.
Computationally Intensive Theory Construction
4. The Imperative for Laws for
Information Systems Theorizing
5. IMPLEMENTATION SCIENCE IN INFORMATION
SYSTEMS RESEARCH Part II: Digital Phenomena
6. Introduction
7. Digital
infrastructures in the Roaring Twenties: Taking stock and moving forward
8.
DIGITAL RESILIENCE: A Roadmap for IS Research and Practice
9. Digital
Sustainability: A Framing Theory Perspective
10. Digital Innovation
Definition and Research Frontiers Part III: Development, Adoption and Use of
MIS
11. Introduction
12. Research on user resistance to information
technology
13. Affordance Theory and How to Use it in IS Research (Revised)
14. Affect in the ICT context
15. NeuroIS Part IV: Managing Organizational
IS, Knowledge and Innovation
16. Introduction
17. Agile Enterprise
Architecture: A Recombination Perspective
18. The next frontiers of online
privacy
19. Imagining Futures of Digital Work: Exploring Paradoxes Through
Speculative Fiction
20. Aligning in Practice: Evidence from Published Cases
Part V: Emerging Technologies. IS in Society. Global Considerations Issues
and Controversies
21. Introduction
22. Still Staying Alive: Praxis, Design,
and Art in the Information Systems Field
23. Tokenization: A Foundation for
Digitized Inter-organizational Relationships
24. Machine Learning in
Information Systems Research: Current and Future Applications, Development,
and Challenges
25. Technology-driven changes in the economy
Robert D. Galliers is Bentley Universitys Distinguished Professor Emeritus, having served as Provost (2002-2009) and Professor Emeritus, University of Warwick, where he was Dean of Warwick Business School (1994-1998). He is Fellow of the British Computer Society; the Royal Society of Arts, and the Association for Information Systems, of which he was President in 1999.
Abayomi Baiyere is Associate Professor at Smith Business School, Queens University, Canada. He is also an affiliate at Copenhagen Business School, Denmark and a docent at the University of Turku, Finland. His research focuses on digital transformation, digital disruption and the societal implications of digitalization (e.g., digital work).
Mari-Klara Stein is Professor of Management at the Department of Business Administration, TalTech. Mari earned her doctorate at Bentley University (USA). Her research focuses on the digital transformation of work. Mari is currently serving as Associate Editor at MIS Quarterly and Senior Editor at Information & Organization.