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ICIME 2011
27-28 April, Toronto, Canada
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Call for Papers, Posters, Round Table Proposals, Practitioner Contributions and Product Demonstrations

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The International Conference on Information Management and Evaluation (ICIME) provides a forum for both researchers and practitioners to come together to develop their understanding of both theory and practice in all aspects of IT/IS management and evaluation. The wide scope of ICIME reflects the increased use of technology to manage information in and between organizations of all types and sizes across the globe. ICIME 2011 will provide opportunities for people working and researching in the field to come together both formally and informally
to share their knowledge and expertise.

Publication opportunity
Papers presented at the conference will be published in the conference proceedings, subject to author registration and payment. Selected papers will also be considered for publication in a special issue of the Electronic Journal of Information Systems Evaluation. The latest issue is now available on the journal website. You can see a full list of the conference and journal accreditations by clicking the star in the right hand side bar.

The advisory group for the conference invites submissions of both academic and practitioner papers on a wide range of topics and a wide range of scholarly approaches including theoretical and empirical papers employing qualitative, quantitative and critical methods.

Academic research, case studies and work-in-progress/posters are welcomed approaches. PhD Research, proposals for roundtable discussions, non-academic contributions and product demonstrations based on the main themes are also invited.

Submission details are given below. Possible topics include, but are not limited to:-

 

Evaluation topics:

§  The evaluation of e-commerce and e-business

§  Evaluating intranets and knowledge management

§  The evaluation of IT projects

§  Research methods for IT/IS evaluation

§  Validation

§  Architecture compliance evaluation

§  Process orientated evaluation

§  Information retrieval systems

§  Evaluation of ICT for development projects

§  Frameworks

§  Using ICT to evaluate academic performance

§  Auditing IS/IT systems and implementations

§  Benefit management

§  The psychology of evaluation.

§  The evaluation of ERP systems

§  The evaluation of open source systems

§  General evaluation methodologies

§  “Green” IT

§  The evaluation of IT investments

Management topics:

§  Decision making processes for new investments

§  e-Procurement

§  The management of IT benefits, costs and risks

§  Human and organisational aspects of IT/IS

§  The management of IS development and IT departments

§  Risk management strategies

§  IS security

§  Global aspects of IS/IT

§  Multi-site implementation

§  The impact of IS on work and organisations

§  IS/IT management practice

§  Records management

§  e-Commerce

§  Computer based training

§  Customer loyalty programmes and reward systems.

§  Business intelligence

§  The management of IT investments

§  The management of “green” IT

§  Enterprise architecture management

§  Change management

§  Work-integrated learning

 

ICT in SMEs topics:

§  SME management strategy and ICT use

§  ICT implementation in SMEs

§  SME business clusters and ICT

§  ICT management practices within SMEs

§  Benchmarking ICT best practices in SMEs

§  The effective use of new technologies in SMEs

§  ICT performance appraisal and evaluation in SMEs

§  The impact of EU, national and regional policies for ICT on SMEs

§  Software (ERP, CRM, etc) for SMEs

§  ICT help and support for SMEs

§  SME workforce skills for ICT

§  Use of ICT by SMEs within supply chain networks

§  Electronically mediated collaboration between SMEs

§  Use of e-business in SMEs

§  Website design for SMEs

§  Business process re-design in SMEs

§  ICT risk and security for SMEs

§  ICT use and consolidation in SMEs

§  ICT investment decisions in SMEs (including appraisals methods, the role of vendors, other sources of advice, etc)

§  Data warehousing and its application in SMEs

New technologies, Innovation and Infrastructure Development topics:

§  Diffusion and adoption of new information technologies

§  Acceptance of new technologies

§  Innovative impact of new technology adoption

§  Information infrastructure development

§  Social aspects of information infrastructures

§  Development and emergence of standards

§  The role of information infrastructures in distributed environments

§  Web technology’s effect on interoperability issues

§  Ubiquitous computing

§  The impact of new technologies on business processes

§  The role of information infrastructures for knowledge creation, innovation and innovation systems

§  Information infrastructures as facilitators of innovation in inter-firm networks

Ethics and Philosophy topics:

§  What values should be applied when evaluating IT systems?

§  Does the IT function need an ethics officer:

§  Ergonomics and ethics: How far are human impacts an ethical issue?

§  What risks should IT management take?

§  What are IT managers responsible for – and where do their responsibilities end?

§  Surveillance, monitoring, teleworking, privacy; If a system can be misused who is responsible

§  Rights and IT: Rights to privacy and access to information and enabling technologies

§  Understanding the ’I’ in IT: What metaphors are most useful for making sense of information?

§  Stakeholders: Who should IT managers consult about what and when?

§  Intellectual property

§  Can IT systems produce knowledge – or only information?

§  How is IT changing the ways managers think?

§  What is the proper place of AI in decision making?

§  Who is responsible for the output of AI?

General topics:

§  IT Diffusion

§  Issues in IS design and development

§  The Information Society

§  ICT and health

§  IT for development

§  IT in education

§  Learning from failures

§  IS and organisational culture

§  ICT in Banking and other financial sectors

§  Legislation

§  IS outsourcing

§  Information sharing

§  Enterprise Resource Planning

§  Mobile commerce

§  Indigenous knowledge systems

§  Strategic IS planning

§  Sense making in IT

§  The potential of Radio Frequency ID (RFID) applications – the internet of things.


In addition to the main topics, submissions are welcomed to five mini tracks: Technology and Competitive Intelligence, chaired by Professor Tiko Iyamu, Tshwane University of Technology, South Africa; Information Security Evaluation in SMEs Engaged in e-Commerce, chaired by Dr Michael Kyobe, University of Cape Town, South Africa; Information Management and Business Communications: An Evaluation Perspective, chaired by Dr Yousef Shahwan, United Arab Emirates University, UAE; e-Government Strategies, Policies and Evaluation, chaired by Farid Shirazi, Ryerson University, Canada and Large scale information systems problems, chaired by Shawren Singh, University of South Africa.

Academic Paper submissions
Papers should address the conference topics listed above and can describe a wide range of research including empirical or theoretical studies. In addition, philosophical papers presenting an argument and papers presenting a process that has been developed and is now ready for wider use are welcome. In all cases concepts and underlying principles should be emphasised, with enough background information to orient any reader who is not a specialist in the particular subject area. The work should not have been published elsewhere and should not be intended to be published elsewhere during the review period. Initially, only a 300-500 abstract is required. See the submission details section below.

Work-in-progress/Posters
Researchers are invited to submit current projects which are either at the proposal stage or are work in progress. In the first instance you should submit an abstract describing the project. If your abstract is selected you will be given the choice of producing a short paper with poster or abstract only with poster. If you opt for a paper, this should be a maximum of 2000 words including abstract, keywords and references. The paper will be double-blind peer reviewed and if accepted will be published in the conference proceedings. Presentation of the work at the conference will take the form of a Poster. Posters will be on display for the duration of the conference and there will be a timetabled slot for contributors to stand by their posters so that participants can come and discuss the research.

PhD Research
Doctoral Candidates are invited to submit papers describing their research. To be eligible, it is necessary for the paper to be produced to a publishable academic standard and papers will be subject to the same criteria and processes as research papers. However the final results of the research may not have been fully completed and interpreted. Wherever possible, PhD papers will be grouped together for presentation at the conference and there will be a discussion to provide constructive feedback on the work.

Case study submissions

Case study submissions should be written to publishable standards. Case studies will be subject to the same criteria and the processes as research papers.

Non-Academic Contributions
The conference committee welcomes contributions from individuals and organisations working in the field. These contributions can take the form of a presentation or a demonstration. In the first instance an abstract should be submitted describing the work to be presented. If the abstract is selected you will be asked whether you wish to produce a paper, a poster or just give a presentation. You will need to register for the conference to have a confirmed timetabled slot.


Round Table Proposals

The Programme Committee invites topical subjects to be proposed for discussion. In the first instance an abstract describing the proposed topic should be submitted. If selected the convener will be given a timetabled slot for the round table and will be expected to register to attend the conference.

Product Demonstrations and Exhibitor Opportunities

If you are contributing to the conference in any of the above categories you can also request the opportunity to give a product demonstration. If you would like to exhibit and/or demonstrate a product at the conference we suggest that you apply for one of our exhibitor packages.

Submission details

Abstracts:

All submission types require an abstract in the first instance. Abstracts should be a minimum of 300 and no more than 500 words including up to five keywords and keyphrases to be received by 6 October 2010. Please read the online guidelines.

Submission:

Submissions should be made via the online form. Please ensure that all required fields are completed. Abstracts must include the proposed title for the paper, the full names (first name and surname, not initials); postal addresses and email addresses of all authors and a telephone number for at least one contact author. Please indicate clearly if the contact author is not the lead author and select the appropriate submission track.

Full paper:

Only required for academic submissions to main conference streams once the abstract has been selected and not to be more than 5,000 words including abstract, keywords and references (the Harvard referencing rules need to be followed). Submission date will be no later than 24 November 2010. Authors are advised that this is a final date. Earlier submission of the full paper helps us to manage the review process in a timely manner. Papers should be submitted as .doc or .rtf file attachments by email to the Conference Manager, Carol Sheasby with the paper submission checklist and copyright form.

Due to the large number of papers received for the conferences, authors are only allowed to present one paper. Therefore if multiple papers are accepted for presentation different co-authors need to present each paper. Author registration and payment must be completed by 23 March 2011 and there are special discounts available for earlybird registration and group bookings, including a special reduced rate for supervisors and students attending together..

 

Important information

  • The selection panel of the conference committee will consider all abstracts received by the submission deadline to ensure that the proposed paper is relevant to the Conference.
  • Abstract selection notifications will then be sent out to relevant authors.
  • All full papers will be double-blind reviewed by members of the conference committee to ensure an adequate standard, that the proposed subject of their abstract has been followed, that the paper is of a suitable length, the standard of English is adequate and the paper is appropriately referenced.
  • For authors whose first language is not English we request that you have your work proof read prior to submission by a native English speaker (or at least a fluent English speaker). Papers can be rejected due to a poor standard of English.
  • Papers that are accepted will be published in the conference proceedings providing at least one author registers and presents the work at the Conference (see the registration section of the conference website for more information about registration).
  • Due to the large number of papers expected for this conference, the committee only allows an author to present one paper. Therefore if multiple papers are accepted for presentation different co-authors need to present each paper.


Important dates

Abstract submission deadline:

6 October 2010

Extended to 22 October 2010

Notification of abstract acceptance:

13 October 2010

Final copy of full paper due:

24 November 2010

Notification of paper acceptance (with any requested changes):

2 February 2011

 

Earlybird registration closes:                 

16 February 2011

 

Final paper submission (with changes): 

2 March 2011

 

Final author payment date:

23 March 2011

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