Location
260-073, Owen G. Glenn Building
Start Date
12-15-2014
Description
Should the IS field relinquish its identity and surrender to the social, political and economic forces that are placing IS scholars outside of traditional IS departments and programs? Should IS scholars mesh into competing departments (e.g., marketing and accounting) and schools (e.g., information studies and engineering) instead of seeking placement in a traditional IS department? By touting IS as the blood that runs through all business functions, would we serve our stakeholders better by embracing our status as a field without a real home and becoming homeless? Is the key to the IS field’s survival ripping IS departments apart, keeping them together or following a hybrid approach? This panel session brings together eminent IS scholars to argue both for and against the case that the IS field should surrender to the destructive forces that are pulling it in every direction.
Recommended Citation
Firth, David; King, John; Whitley, Edgar; Weber, Ron; Koch, Hope; and Looney, Clayton, "The King is Dead! Long Live the King! Homelessness and Survival in the IS Field" (2014). ICIS 2014 Proceedings. 2.
https://aisel.aisnet.org/icis2014/proceedings/Panels/2
The King is Dead! Long Live the King! Homelessness and Survival in the IS Field
260-073, Owen G. Glenn Building
Should the IS field relinquish its identity and surrender to the social, political and economic forces that are placing IS scholars outside of traditional IS departments and programs? Should IS scholars mesh into competing departments (e.g., marketing and accounting) and schools (e.g., information studies and engineering) instead of seeking placement in a traditional IS department? By touting IS as the blood that runs through all business functions, would we serve our stakeholders better by embracing our status as a field without a real home and becoming homeless? Is the key to the IS field’s survival ripping IS departments apart, keeping them together or following a hybrid approach? This panel session brings together eminent IS scholars to argue both for and against the case that the IS field should surrender to the destructive forces that are pulling it in every direction.