All Stories

  1. Patient Perspectives on Sharing Anonymized Personal Health Data Using a Digital System for Dynamic Consent and Research Feedback: A Qualitative Study
  2. Challenges to ethical publishing in the digital era
  3. Dynamic Consent: A Possible Solution to Improve Patient Confidence and Trust in How Electronic Patient Records Are Used in Medical Research
  4. Twenty years of the European information systems academy at ECIS: emergent trends and research topics
  5. Dynamic consent: a patient interface for twenty-first century research networks
  6. A dynamic model of patient consent to sharing of medical record data
  7. Moving to the Cloud Corporation
  8. Who do you think you are? A review of the complex interplay between information systems, identification and identity
  9. The Challenges
  10. The Technology Trajectory
  11. Conclusion: The Bigger Picture
  12. The Service Trajectory
  13. Cloud Futures: Changing the Form of Organization
  14. Cloud and the Diffusion of Innovation
  15. Management: Building the Retained Organization
  16. Security and Privacy Concerns Revisited
  17. Cloud in Context: Managing New Waves of Power
  18. Cloud sourcing and innovation: slow train coming?
  19. Fixing identity? Biometrics and the tensions of material practices
  20. Cloud Computing as Innovation: Studying Diffusion
  21. Cloud Computing - the desires framework
  22. Consent and Research Governance in Biobanks: Evidence from Focus Groups with Medical Researchers
  23. Cloud Sourcing: Implications for Managing the IT Function
  24. Cloud on the Landscape: Promises and Challenges
  25. Innovation: Step-Change in Outsourcing: Towards Collaborative Innovation
  26. Shifting to Cloud Services: Current Challenges and Future Opportunities
  27. A constructionist learning environment for teachers to model learning designs
  28. Global Identity Policies and Technology: Do we Understand the Question?
  29. Global Challenges for Identity Policies
  30. Informational privacy, consent and the “control” of personal data
  31. Developing the Information and Knowledge Agenda in Information Systems: Insights From Philosophy
  32. New Directions in Surveillance and Privacy
  33. Critically classifying: UK e-government website benchmarking and the recasting of the citizen as customer
  34. Object Lessons and Invisible Technologies
  35. Academic writing by 'international' students in the internet age: studying diversity in practice
  36. Doing the politics of technological decision making: due process and the debate about identity cards in the U.K.
  37. Governing diversity in the digital ecosystem
  38. Departmental influences on policy design
  39. The ranking of top IS journals: a perspective from the London School of Economics
  40. How International Postgraduate Students Tackle Writing Assignments
  41. Managing Public Expectations of Technological Systems: A Case Study of a Problematic Government Project
  42. An alternative perspective on citation classics: Evidence from the first 10 years of the European Conference on Information Systems
  43. Balance, scrutiny and identity cards in the UK
  44. Reflections on the Academic Policy Analysis Process and the UK Identity Cards Scheme
  45. Vive les differences?Developing a profile of European information systems research as a basis for international comparisons
  46. The European Information Systems Academy
  47. Object Lessons and Invisible Technologies
  48. Agile Information Systems
  49. Visiting the red-light zones with Claudio
  50. Policy discourse and data retention: The technology politics of surveillance in the United Kingdom
  51. Editorial
  52. On the interpretative flexibility of hosted ERP systems
  53. Ruling the Root: Internet Governance and the Taming of Cyberspace
  54. Configuring peer-to-peer software: an empirical study of how users react to the regulatory features of software
  55. A Computer Called LEO: Lyons Teashops and the World's First Office Computer20041Georgina Ferry. A Computer Called LEO: Lyons Teashops and the World's First Office Computer. London: Fourth Estate 2003. , ISBN: 1‐84115‐185‐8
  56. Regulating Architecture and Architectures of Regulation: Contributions from Information Systems
  57. Organizational Information Systems in the Context of Globalization
  58. Global and Organizational Discourse about Information Technology
  59. The Footprint of Regulation
  60. Placing Language in the Foreground: Themes and Methods in Information Technology Discourse
  61. Time and Information Technology: Temporal Impacts on Individuals, Organizations, and Society
  62. The regulation of electronic commerce: learning from the UK's RIP act
  63. Realigning Research and Practice in Information Systems Development
  64. Studying the Translations of NHSnet
  65. Cultivating Recalcitrance in Information Systems Research
  66. Doing Politics Around Electronic Commerce: Opposing the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Bill
  67. About experiments and style – A critique of laboratory research in information systems
  68. Representing Human and Non-Human Stakeholders: On Speaking with Authority
  69. The Construction of Social Reality19992John R. Searle.The Construction of Social Reality. London: Penguin 1996. £8.99 (paperback), ISBN: ISBN 0140235906
  70. Aramis or the Love of Technology19991B. Latour (trans. Catherine Porter).Aramis or the Love of Technology. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press $19.95 (paperback), ISBN: ISBN 0674043235
  71. Understanding participation in entrepreneurial organizations: some hermeneutic readings
  72. Golem, Inc.: A Comment on Certain Points Where Cybernetics Impinges on Religion991N. Wiener. Golem, Inc.: A Comment on Certain Points Where Cybernetics Impinges on Religion. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press 1964. , ISBN: 0 262 73011 1
  73. The Golem at Large: What you Should Know about Technology992H. Collins, T. Pinch. The Golem at Large: What you Should Know about Technology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1998. , ISBN: 0 521 555141 2
  74. The Golem: What you Should Know about Science993H.M. Collins, T. Pinch. The Golem: What you Should Know about Science. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1993. , ISBN: 0 521 64550 6
  75. Re-Evaluating Power in Information Rich Organizations: New Theories and Approaches
  76. Erratum
  77. Erratum
  78. In cyberspace all they see is your words
  79. Against method‐ism
  80. Confusion, social knowledge and the design of intelligent machines
  81. The environmental contribution of personal computers
  82. The spring model for knowledge-based systems analysis
  83. Knowledge acquisition for organisational problem solving: Developing expert systems and beyond☆
  84. Artificial Experts: Social Knowledge and Intelligent Machines
  85. Building Knowledge Based Systems: Towards a Methodology
  86. Artificial Experts: Social Knowledge and Intelligent Machines
  87. Two approaches to developing expert systems: A consideration of formal and semi-formal domains
  88. Expert systems: true support for the process of decision making
  89. Knowledge acquisition to facilitate organizational problem solving
  90. Developing and running expert systems with PESYS
  91. Studying the Translations of NHSnet
  92. Studying the Translations of NHSnet
  93. Studying the Translations of NHSnet
  94. Studying the Translations of NHSnet
  95. Studying the Translations of NHSnet
  96. New Insights into Studying Agency and Information Technology