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Enterprise systems use: towards a structurational analysis of enterprise systems induced organizational transformation

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Enterprise systems use: towards a structurational analysis of enterprise systems induced organizational transformation. / Devadoss, Paul; Pan, Shan Ling.
In: Communications of the Association for Information Systems, Vol. 19, 2007, p. 352-385.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Devadoss P, Pan SL. Enterprise systems use: towards a structurational analysis of enterprise systems induced organizational transformation. Communications of the Association for Information Systems. 2007;19:352-385.

Author

Devadoss, Paul ; Pan, Shan Ling. / Enterprise systems use : towards a structurational analysis of enterprise systems induced organizational transformation. In: Communications of the Association for Information Systems. 2007 ; Vol. 19. pp. 352-385.

Bibtex

@article{d67928925950466eb466f41a5e3535ff,
title = "Enterprise systems use: towards a structurational analysis of enterprise systems induced organizational transformation",
abstract = "Enterprise systems (ES) are industry-specific, customizable software packages that integrate information and business process in organizations. Despite the advantages associated with implementing ES, their success has been mixed. This has attracted the interest of researchers and resulted in a proliferation of literature on implementation. However, the extant ES studies lack a theoretical framework for the examination of ES use and its implications for change in organizations. We seek to bridge this research gap by proposing a theoretical framework for change induced through ES use. This paper contributes to theory in two areas. First, by analytically separating the notions of structure, institution, and organization, we illustrate a consistent application of Giddens' structuration theory to ES use. Second, we develop a structurational model of ES-induced change that explicates the relationship between specific characteristics of ES and the nature of change occasioned through their use by human agents within a historically shaped organizational context. Towards this objective, we distinguish ES from other information systems. Implications for practitioners and researchers are presented.",
author = "Paul Devadoss and Pan, {Shan Ling}",
year = "2007",
language = "English",
volume = "19",
pages = "352--385",
journal = "Communications of the Association for Information Systems",
issn = "1529-3181",
publisher = "Association for Information Systems",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Enterprise systems use

T2 - towards a structurational analysis of enterprise systems induced organizational transformation

AU - Devadoss, Paul

AU - Pan, Shan Ling

PY - 2007

Y1 - 2007

N2 - Enterprise systems (ES) are industry-specific, customizable software packages that integrate information and business process in organizations. Despite the advantages associated with implementing ES, their success has been mixed. This has attracted the interest of researchers and resulted in a proliferation of literature on implementation. However, the extant ES studies lack a theoretical framework for the examination of ES use and its implications for change in organizations. We seek to bridge this research gap by proposing a theoretical framework for change induced through ES use. This paper contributes to theory in two areas. First, by analytically separating the notions of structure, institution, and organization, we illustrate a consistent application of Giddens' structuration theory to ES use. Second, we develop a structurational model of ES-induced change that explicates the relationship between specific characteristics of ES and the nature of change occasioned through their use by human agents within a historically shaped organizational context. Towards this objective, we distinguish ES from other information systems. Implications for practitioners and researchers are presented.

AB - Enterprise systems (ES) are industry-specific, customizable software packages that integrate information and business process in organizations. Despite the advantages associated with implementing ES, their success has been mixed. This has attracted the interest of researchers and resulted in a proliferation of literature on implementation. However, the extant ES studies lack a theoretical framework for the examination of ES use and its implications for change in organizations. We seek to bridge this research gap by proposing a theoretical framework for change induced through ES use. This paper contributes to theory in two areas. First, by analytically separating the notions of structure, institution, and organization, we illustrate a consistent application of Giddens' structuration theory to ES use. Second, we develop a structurational model of ES-induced change that explicates the relationship between specific characteristics of ES and the nature of change occasioned through their use by human agents within a historically shaped organizational context. Towards this objective, we distinguish ES from other information systems. Implications for practitioners and researchers are presented.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 19

SP - 352

EP - 385

JO - Communications of the Association for Information Systems

JF - Communications of the Association for Information Systems

SN - 1529-3181

ER -