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Research in Information Systems: Intra-disciplinary and Inter-disciplinary Approaches

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Research in Information Systems: Intra-disciplinary and Inter-disciplinary Approaches. / Tarafdar, Monideepa; Davison, Robert.
In: Journal of the Association for Information Systems, Vol. 19, No. 6, 30.06.2018, p. 308-327.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Tarafdar, M & Davison, R 2018, 'Research in Information Systems: Intra-disciplinary and Inter-disciplinary Approaches', Journal of the Association for Information Systems, vol. 19, no. 6, pp. 308-327.

APA

Tarafdar, M., & Davison, R. (2018). Research in Information Systems: Intra-disciplinary and Inter-disciplinary Approaches. Journal of the Association for Information Systems, 19(6), 308-327.

Vancouver

Tarafdar M, Davison R. Research in Information Systems: Intra-disciplinary and Inter-disciplinary Approaches. Journal of the Association for Information Systems. 2018 Jun 30;19(6):308-327.

Author

Tarafdar, Monideepa ; Davison, Robert. / Research in Information Systems : Intra-disciplinary and Inter-disciplinary Approaches. In: Journal of the Association for Information Systems. 2018 ; Vol. 19, No. 6. pp. 308-327.

Bibtex

@article{1aba3f9ea8a14c0883ef387b4b51404f,
title = "Research in Information Systems: Intra-disciplinary and Inter-disciplinary Approaches",
abstract = "The deep embeddedness of Information Systems (IS) in many areas of human activity poses a dual challenge to the IS discipline: advancing an expanding disciplinary boundary that includes an increasing set of IS topics; and engaging with other disciplines in order to understand IS-enabled phenomena. An inability to meet these challenges could lead to conceptually stunted development of the IS discipline, missed opportunities to inform other disciplines and a failure to effectively contribute to solving the pressing problems of our time. We undertook this study to investigate both how IS research has addressed these challenges in the past and how it can continue to do so in the future. Drawing on the concept of knowledge-materialization through knowledge-creating practice, and based on approaches for disciplinary and interdisciplinary knowledge creation, we theorize four different types of knowledge contribution that IS researchers can produce, encompassing both an intra-disciplinary and an inter-disciplinary view. We then analyse a wide-ranging sample of research studies published in 176 papers in the AIS basket of eight journals to investigate the nature of their contribution vis-{\`a}-vis these types. We find that the predominant types of knowledge contribution are intra-disciplinary, with relatively few inter-disciplinary contributions. Based on our analysis, we explain why each type of knowledge contribution is important to the IS discipline and provide guidance for IS scholars in planning their research strategies for these contributions. We comment on the implications of our study for IS scholars and for the vigour and growth of the IS discipline.",
author = "Monideepa Tarafdar and Robert Davison",
year = "2018",
month = jun,
day = "30",
language = "English",
volume = "19",
pages = "308--327",
journal = "Journal of the Association for Information Systems",
issn = "1536-9323",
publisher = "Association for Information Systems",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Research in Information Systems

T2 - Intra-disciplinary and Inter-disciplinary Approaches

AU - Tarafdar, Monideepa

AU - Davison, Robert

PY - 2018/6/30

Y1 - 2018/6/30

N2 - The deep embeddedness of Information Systems (IS) in many areas of human activity poses a dual challenge to the IS discipline: advancing an expanding disciplinary boundary that includes an increasing set of IS topics; and engaging with other disciplines in order to understand IS-enabled phenomena. An inability to meet these challenges could lead to conceptually stunted development of the IS discipline, missed opportunities to inform other disciplines and a failure to effectively contribute to solving the pressing problems of our time. We undertook this study to investigate both how IS research has addressed these challenges in the past and how it can continue to do so in the future. Drawing on the concept of knowledge-materialization through knowledge-creating practice, and based on approaches for disciplinary and interdisciplinary knowledge creation, we theorize four different types of knowledge contribution that IS researchers can produce, encompassing both an intra-disciplinary and an inter-disciplinary view. We then analyse a wide-ranging sample of research studies published in 176 papers in the AIS basket of eight journals to investigate the nature of their contribution vis-à-vis these types. We find that the predominant types of knowledge contribution are intra-disciplinary, with relatively few inter-disciplinary contributions. Based on our analysis, we explain why each type of knowledge contribution is important to the IS discipline and provide guidance for IS scholars in planning their research strategies for these contributions. We comment on the implications of our study for IS scholars and for the vigour and growth of the IS discipline.

AB - The deep embeddedness of Information Systems (IS) in many areas of human activity poses a dual challenge to the IS discipline: advancing an expanding disciplinary boundary that includes an increasing set of IS topics; and engaging with other disciplines in order to understand IS-enabled phenomena. An inability to meet these challenges could lead to conceptually stunted development of the IS discipline, missed opportunities to inform other disciplines and a failure to effectively contribute to solving the pressing problems of our time. We undertook this study to investigate both how IS research has addressed these challenges in the past and how it can continue to do so in the future. Drawing on the concept of knowledge-materialization through knowledge-creating practice, and based on approaches for disciplinary and interdisciplinary knowledge creation, we theorize four different types of knowledge contribution that IS researchers can produce, encompassing both an intra-disciplinary and an inter-disciplinary view. We then analyse a wide-ranging sample of research studies published in 176 papers in the AIS basket of eight journals to investigate the nature of their contribution vis-à-vis these types. We find that the predominant types of knowledge contribution are intra-disciplinary, with relatively few inter-disciplinary contributions. Based on our analysis, we explain why each type of knowledge contribution is important to the IS discipline and provide guidance for IS scholars in planning their research strategies for these contributions. We comment on the implications of our study for IS scholars and for the vigour and growth of the IS discipline.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 19

SP - 308

EP - 327

JO - Journal of the Association for Information Systems

JF - Journal of the Association for Information Systems

SN - 1536-9323

IS - 6

ER -