2020 | ||
Monday, August 10th | ||
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12:00 AM |
A Cross-Country Analysis of Cross-border E-commerce Adoption Mohammad I. Merhi, Indiana University South Bend 12:00 AM |
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12:00 AM |
May Bantan, Nova Southeastern University 12:00 AM |
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12:00 AM |
Cyberbullying in Global Virtual Teams – A Thematic Analysis Abdullah Oguz, University of North Carolina at Greensboro 12:00 AM |
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12:00 AM |
Identifying the Service Quality for a B2B Cross-Border E-Commerce Platform Shu-Chun Ho, National Kaohsiung Normal University 12:00 AM |
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12:00 AM |
The Effect Mechanism of Privacy Control on Passengers’ Participation in Ridesharing Linlin Su, University of International Business and Economics 12:00 AM |
Globalization has historically been tied to technological innovation, and the present era of a networked information society is no different. Information systems (IS) have provided the infrastructure for multinational businesses, created new cultural connections irrespective of geographic boundaries and distances, and allowed an increasingly mobile global population to be connected to their friends, families, and cultures no matter where they are. The track welcomes submissions that relate to all aspects of global IS, or IS research situated in a global, international or cross-cultural context. The track is open to all methodological approaches and perspectives.