© 2017 by the Association for Information Systems. In this commentary, we reflect on the program chair experience of ICIS 2015 to pass on some useful organizational memory for the IS community at large. We also reflect on volunteer effort required for a high-quality conference and the challenges of maintaining quality over a diverse and dispersed reviewing effort. We ask whether we can count on this volunteer effort in a changing higher education context where universities value volunteer effort or service less than promotion and tenure. We make several wide-ranging recommendations to preserve organizational memory and ensure the ongoing excellence of ICIS. Finally, we elaborate on some hard questions about whether the current conference mo...
Volunteering underpins SIGCHI’s work, but volunteer efforts are coming under huge stress across SIGC...
This session is designed to obtain input from ICfS participants on the proposed undergraduate curric...
Journals are the lifeblood of all academic professions, including information systems. At the 2004 I...
In this commentary, we reflect on the program chair experience of ICIS 2015 to pass on some useful o...
This year a record number of panel proposals were submitted for consideration. Of the over twenty-fi...
Since the inception of the Information Systems (IS) discipline scholars have questioned and debated ...
The paper presents the report of a panel that debated the review process in the information systems ...
At the AIS’95 conference, many were inspired by Tom Davenport’s keynote address. Tom lamented that w...
The ICIS 2009 Call for Papers states that “[o]ur discipline faces an unprecedented challenge as we s...
ICIS 2009 marks the 30th anniversary of the 1st ICIS Doctoral Consortium held in Philadelphia, Penns...
This paper is intended to encourage members of the IS community to participate in Information System...
Practitioners have played an important role in the information system (IS) field’s development since...
While the aspiration for the IS discipline's bright future is a shared objective, there is a controv...
While the aspiration for the IS discipline\u27s bright future is a shared objective, there is a cont...
At the 2004 ICIS, Rick Watson, then president of AIS, put forth a series of proposals about how we s...
Volunteering underpins SIGCHI’s work, but volunteer efforts are coming under huge stress across SIGC...
This session is designed to obtain input from ICfS participants on the proposed undergraduate curric...
Journals are the lifeblood of all academic professions, including information systems. At the 2004 I...
In this commentary, we reflect on the program chair experience of ICIS 2015 to pass on some useful o...
This year a record number of panel proposals were submitted for consideration. Of the over twenty-fi...
Since the inception of the Information Systems (IS) discipline scholars have questioned and debated ...
The paper presents the report of a panel that debated the review process in the information systems ...
At the AIS’95 conference, many were inspired by Tom Davenport’s keynote address. Tom lamented that w...
The ICIS 2009 Call for Papers states that “[o]ur discipline faces an unprecedented challenge as we s...
ICIS 2009 marks the 30th anniversary of the 1st ICIS Doctoral Consortium held in Philadelphia, Penns...
This paper is intended to encourage members of the IS community to participate in Information System...
Practitioners have played an important role in the information system (IS) field’s development since...
While the aspiration for the IS discipline's bright future is a shared objective, there is a controv...
While the aspiration for the IS discipline\u27s bright future is a shared objective, there is a cont...
At the 2004 ICIS, Rick Watson, then president of AIS, put forth a series of proposals about how we s...
Volunteering underpins SIGCHI’s work, but volunteer efforts are coming under huge stress across SIGC...
This session is designed to obtain input from ICfS participants on the proposed undergraduate curric...
Journals are the lifeblood of all academic professions, including information systems. At the 2004 I...