This paper puts forward an academic identity for the IS discipline which emerges out of its displayed academic artifacts – namely, papers published in two of the discipline’s major journals (Information Systems Research and MIS Quarterly) between 1977 and 2006. Our study focuses on two specific attributes of these papers: the focal IT Artifact and the IS Theme. An analysis of 1056 papers reveals an academic identity characterized by a relatively persistent focus on a small set of IT Artifacts and a similarly small set of IS Themes. The analysis suggests that our academic identity is indicated by two central and enduring intellectual cores associated with a handful of IT Artifacts and IS Themes, which have captured the attention of IS resear...
Three related papers recently argued for the adoption of specific \u27organizing principles\u27 for ...
Debates about the core and the scope of the IS field and about whether the core and scope are relate...
The ongoing debate about the identity of the Information Systems (IS) discipline is examined from a ...
Even though computerized information systems are a relatively recent phenomenon that continues to ev...
To understand the state of IS research is, to a large extent, to understand (1) what are considered ...
[[abstract]]To understand the state of IS research is, to a large extent, to understand (1) what are...
To understand the state of IS research is, to a large extent, to understand (1) what are considered ...
Defining the central identity of the information systems (IS) field is a subject of ongoing concern ...
What is the intellectual core of the information systems discipline? This study uses latent semanti...
The “IT artifact” and debates about the core of the IS field received a lot of attention in the last...
The ongoing debate about the identity of the Information Systems (IS) discipline is examined from a ...
The information systems (IS) research community has long engaged in dialogue as to the core of IS an...
More than 10 years ago, Orlikowski and Iacono (2001) examined the conceptualization of Information T...
In one of the recent additions to the IS identity and diversity discussion, Alter questions the def...
Extending the research on our discipline’s identity, we examine how the major research themes have e...
Three related papers recently argued for the adoption of specific \u27organizing principles\u27 for ...
Debates about the core and the scope of the IS field and about whether the core and scope are relate...
The ongoing debate about the identity of the Information Systems (IS) discipline is examined from a ...
Even though computerized information systems are a relatively recent phenomenon that continues to ev...
To understand the state of IS research is, to a large extent, to understand (1) what are considered ...
[[abstract]]To understand the state of IS research is, to a large extent, to understand (1) what are...
To understand the state of IS research is, to a large extent, to understand (1) what are considered ...
Defining the central identity of the information systems (IS) field is a subject of ongoing concern ...
What is the intellectual core of the information systems discipline? This study uses latent semanti...
The “IT artifact” and debates about the core of the IS field received a lot of attention in the last...
The ongoing debate about the identity of the Information Systems (IS) discipline is examined from a ...
The information systems (IS) research community has long engaged in dialogue as to the core of IS an...
More than 10 years ago, Orlikowski and Iacono (2001) examined the conceptualization of Information T...
In one of the recent additions to the IS identity and diversity discussion, Alter questions the def...
Extending the research on our discipline’s identity, we examine how the major research themes have e...
Three related papers recently argued for the adoption of specific \u27organizing principles\u27 for ...
Debates about the core and the scope of the IS field and about whether the core and scope are relate...
The ongoing debate about the identity of the Information Systems (IS) discipline is examined from a ...