Challenges to identifying the information systems (IS) field originate within the community, from external institutional forces, from the change in technology, from the emergence of new phenomena, and finally, from the changing understanding of what a “field” or “discipline” entails. In this study we trace the historiography of the IS field to illustrate sources of confusion arising from deeply held assumptions regarding the formation and legitimacy of IS identity. By introducing the identity of IS as a “human science” as opposed to that of a natural science, we illuminate an interstitial gap in knowledge which IS inhabits. To address this gap, we posit sociomateriality as a perspective that offers IS a distinct identity as an academically...
Information Systems and other academic fileds struggle with what is termed an identity crisis. For I...
This paper seeks to contribute to better understanding of information within the information systems...
This contribution to the SIGPHIL workshop on reconciling the social and technical in IS research pro...
The ongoing debate about the identity of the Information Systems (IS) discipline is examined from a ...
The ongoing debate about the identity of the Information Systems (IS) discipline is examined from a ...
The Information Systems (IS) discipline is apparently undergoing an identity crisis. Academicians qu...
Part 5: Revisiting Concepts and TheoriesInternational audiencePurpose: The present paper addresses t...
Defining the central identity of the information systems (IS) field is a subject of ongoing concern ...
The recent debate about crisis in the Information Systems (IS) discipline is largely attributed to i...
Even though computerized information systems are a relatively recent phenomenon that continues to ev...
We are concerned that the IS research community is making the discipline’s central identity ambi-guo...
This study applies the theory of practice to view the information systems (IS) field in terms of its...
This paper seeks to offer an assessment on the extent to which we, as IS academics, have been faithf...
Identity crisis has been a longstanding problem for the Information Systems (IS) community. Most pre...
This article presents an economic basis for declaring Information Systems and Information Technology...
Information Systems and other academic fileds struggle with what is termed an identity crisis. For I...
This paper seeks to contribute to better understanding of information within the information systems...
This contribution to the SIGPHIL workshop on reconciling the social and technical in IS research pro...
The ongoing debate about the identity of the Information Systems (IS) discipline is examined from a ...
The ongoing debate about the identity of the Information Systems (IS) discipline is examined from a ...
The Information Systems (IS) discipline is apparently undergoing an identity crisis. Academicians qu...
Part 5: Revisiting Concepts and TheoriesInternational audiencePurpose: The present paper addresses t...
Defining the central identity of the information systems (IS) field is a subject of ongoing concern ...
The recent debate about crisis in the Information Systems (IS) discipline is largely attributed to i...
Even though computerized information systems are a relatively recent phenomenon that continues to ev...
We are concerned that the IS research community is making the discipline’s central identity ambi-guo...
This study applies the theory of practice to view the information systems (IS) field in terms of its...
This paper seeks to offer an assessment on the extent to which we, as IS academics, have been faithf...
Identity crisis has been a longstanding problem for the Information Systems (IS) community. Most pre...
This article presents an economic basis for declaring Information Systems and Information Technology...
Information Systems and other academic fileds struggle with what is termed an identity crisis. For I...
This paper seeks to contribute to better understanding of information within the information systems...
This contribution to the SIGPHIL workshop on reconciling the social and technical in IS research pro...