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European Journal of Information Systems, Volume 29
Volume 29, Number 1, 2020
- Pär J. Ågerfalk:
Artificial intelligence as digital agency. 1-8
- Jan vom Brocke, Alan R. Hevner, Pierre-Majorique Léger, Peter Walla, René Riedl:
Advancing a NeuroIS research agenda with four areas of societal contributions. 9-24
- Jie Mein Goh, Alvaro E. Arenas:
IT value creation in public sector: how IT-enabled capabilities mitigate tradeoffs in public organisations. 25-43 - Babajide Osatuyi, Ofir Turel:
Conceptualisation and validation of system use reduction as a self-regulatory IS use behaviour. 44-64
- Antti Salovaara, Bikesh Raj Upreti, Jussi Nykänen, Jani Merikivi:
Building on shaky foundations? Lack of falsification and knowledge contestation in IS theories, methods, and practices. 65-83
- Neetu Singh, Upkar Varshney:
IT-based reminders for medication adherence: systematic review, taxonomy, framework and research directions. 84-108
Volume 29, Number 2, 2020
- Pär J. Ågerfalk, Fredrik J. Karlsson:
Artefactual and empirical contributions in information systems research. 109-113
- Gabriele Piccoli, Joaquin Alfredo Rodriguez, Biagio Palese, Marcin Lukasz Bartosiak:
Feedback at scale: designing for accurate and timely practical digital skills evaluation. 114-133 - Ulrich Remus, Martin Wiener, Carol Saunders, Magnus Mähring:
The impact of control styles and control modes on individual-level outcomes: a first test of the integrated IS project control theory. 134-152 - Adrian Holzer, Bruno Kocher, Samuel Bendahan, Isabelle Vonèche Cardia, Jorge Mazuze, Denis Gillet:
Gamifying knowledge sharing in humanitarian organisations: a design science journey. 153-171 - Amanda J. Porter, Bart van den Hooff:
The complementarity of autonomy and control in mobile work. 172-189 - Nick Benschop, Cokky A. R. Hilhorst, Arno L. P. Nuijten, Mark Keil:
Detection of early warning signals for overruns in IS projects: linguistic analysis of business case language. 190-202
Volume 29, Number 3, 2020
Editorial
- Pär J. Ågerfalk, Kieran Conboy, Michael D. Myers:
Information systems in the age of pandemics: COVID-19 and beyond. 203-207
- Jan Mendling, Brian T. Pentland, Jan Recker:
Building a complementary agenda for business process management and digital innovation. 208-219
- Bendik Bygstad, Egil Øvrelid:
Architectural alignment of process innovation and digital infrastructure in a high-tech hospital. 220-237
- Abayomi Baiyere, Hannu Salmela, Tommi Tapanainen:
Digital transformation and the new logics of business process management. 238-259
- Patrick Mikalef, John Krogstie:
Examining the interplay between big data analytics and contextual factors in driving process innovation capabilities. 260-287
- Samuli Laato, A. K. M. Najmul Islam, Muhammad Nazrul Islam, Eoin Whelan:
What drives unverified information sharing and cyberchondria during the COVID-19 pandemic? 288-305 - Rennie Naidoo:
A multi-level influence model of COVID-19 themed cybercrime. 306-321
Volume 29, Number 4, 2020
- Raquel Benbunan-Fich, Kevin C. Desouza, Kim Normann Andersen:
IT-enabled innovation in the public sector: introduction to the special issue. 323-328
- Johan Magnusson, Dina Koutsikouri, Tero Päivärinta:
Efficiency creep and shadow innovation: enacting ambidextrous IT Governance in the public sector. 329-349 - Ott Velsberg, Ulrika H. Westergren, Katrin Jonsson:
Exploring smartness in public sector innovation - creating smart public services with the Internet of Things. 350-368 - Valerie L. Bartelt, Andrew Urbaczewski, Andrew G. Mueller, Suprateek Sarker:
Enabling collaboration and innovation in Denver's smart city through a living lab: a social capital perspective. 369-387
- Jesse Pietz, Scott McCoy, Joseph Wilck:
Chasing John Snow: data analytics in the COVID-19 era. 388-404 - Andrew Urbaczewski, Young-Jin Lee:
Information Technology and the pandemic: a preliminary multinational analysis of the impact of mobile tracking technology on the COVID-19 contagion control. 405-414 - Simon Trang, Manuel Trenz, Welf H. Weiger, Monideepa Tarafdar, Christy M. K. Cheung:
One app to trace them all? Examining app specifications for mass acceptance of contact-tracing apps. 415-428 - Lena Waizenegger, Brad McKenna, Wenjie Cai, Taino Bendz:
An affordance perspective of team collaboration and enforced working from home during COVID-19. 429-442
Volume 29, Number 5, 2020
- Likoebe M. Maruping, Sabine Matook:
The evolution of software development orchestration: current state and an agenda for future research. 443-457
- Anna Wiedemann, Manuel Wiesche, Heiko Gewald, Helmut Krcmar:
Understanding how DevOps aligns development and operations: a tripartite model of intra-IT alignment. 458-473 - Aymeric Hemon, Frantz Rowe, Laetitia Monnier-Senicourt:
Orchestrating automation and sharing in DevOps teams: a revelatory case of job satisfaction factors, risk and work conditions. 474-499 - Poonacha K. Medappa, Shirish C. Srivastava:
Ideological shifts in open source orchestration: examining the influence of licence choice and organisational participation on open source project outcomes. 500-520 - Xiaolei Wang, Terence T. Ow, Luning Liu, Yuqiang Feng, Yuan Liang:
Effects of peers and network position on user participation in a firm-hosted software community: the moderating role of network centrality. 521-544
- Frantz Rowe, Ojelanki K. Ngwenyama, Jean-Loup Richet:
Contact-tracing apps and alienation in the age of COVID-19. 545-562 - Janine Hacker, Jan vom Brocke, Joshua Handali, Markus Otto, Johannes Schneider:
Virtually in this together - how web-conferencing systems enabled a new virtual togetherness during the COVID-19 crisis. 563-584 - Mihoko Sakurai, Hameed Chughtai:
Resilience against crises: COVID-19 and lessons from natural disasters. 585-594 - Martin Adam, Dominick Werner, Charlotte Wendt, Alexander Benlian:
Containing COVID-19 through physical distancing: the impact of real-time crowding information. 595-607
Volume 29, Number 6, 2020
- Paul Benjamin Lowry, Stacie Petter, Jan Marco Leimeister:
Desperately seeking the artefacts and the foundations of native theory in gamification research: why information systems researchers can play a legitimate role in this discourse and how they can better contribute. 609-620
- Ali Khan, Farzam Boroomand, Jane Webster, Xerxes Minocher:
From Elements to Structures: An Agenda for Organisational Gamification. 621-640
- Sofia Marlena Schöbel, Andreas Janson, Matthias Söllner:
Capturing the complexity of gamification elements: a holistic approach for analysing existing and deriving novel gamification designs. 641-668 - Ersin Dincelli, InduShobha N. Chengalur-Smith:
Choose your own training adventure: designing a gamified SETA artefact for improving information security and privacy through interactive storytelling. 669-687 - Zachary J. Sheffler, De Liu, Shawn P. Curley:
Ingredients for successful badges: evidence from a field experiment in bike commuting. 688-703
- Laura Amo, Ruochen Liao, Rajiv Kishore, Hejamadi Raghav Rao:
Effects of structural and trait competitiveness stimulated by points and leaderboards on user engagement and performance growth: A natural experiment with gamification in an informal learning environment. 704-730
- Kai Riemer, Raffaele Ciriello, Sandra Peter, Daniel Schlagwein:
Digital contact-tracing adoption in the COVID-19 pandemic: IT governance for collective action at the societal level. 731-745 - Aurélie Leclercq-Vandelannoitte, Jeremy Aroles:
Does the end justify the means?Information systems and control society in the age of pandemics. 746-761 - Andrea Carugati, Lapo Mola, Loïc Plé, Marion Lauwers, Antonio Giangreco:
Exploitation and exploration of IT in times of pandemic: from dealing with emergency to institutionalising crisis practices. 762-777
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