Journal: IT & People

Volume 22, Issue 4

297 -- 316Joseph Feller, Patrick Finnegan, Jeremy Hayes, Philip O Reilly. Institutionalising information asymmetry: governance structures for open innovation
317 -- 334Diego Ponte, Alessandro Rossi, Marco Zamarian. Cooperative design efforts for the development of complex IT-artefacts
335 -- 350David Graham Wastell, Juergen S. Sauer, Claudia Schmeink. Time for a design turn in IS innovation research? A practice report from the home front
351 -- 366Sunyoung Cho, Lars Mathiassen, Michael Gallivan. Crossing the diffusion chasm: from invention to penetration of a telehealth innovation
367 -- 381Endre Grøtnes. Standardization as open innovation: two cases from the mobile industry

Volume 22, Issue 3

192 -- 200Ilan Oshri, Julia Kotlarsky, Joseph W. Rottman, Leslie P. Willcocks. Global sourcing: recent trends and issues
201 -- 222Kevan Penter, Graham Pervan, John Wreford. Offshore BPO at large captive operations in India
223 -- 241Robert Gregory, Michael Prifling, Roman Beck. The role of cultural intelligence for the emergence of negotiated culture in IT offshore outsourcing projects
242 -- 269Elisa Mattarelli, Amar Gupta. Offshore-onsite subgroup dynamics in globally distributed teams
270 -- 288Erik Beulen. The contribution of a global service provider s Human Resources Information System (HRIS) to staff retention in emerging markets: Comparing issues and implications in six developing countries

Volume 22, Issue 2

92 -- 108John R. Goodall, Wayne G. Lutters, Anita Komlodi. Developing expertise for network intrusion detection
109 -- 131Víctor M. González, Bonnie A. Nardi, Gloria Mark. Ensembles: understanding the instantiation of activities
132 -- 156Netta Iivari. Constructing the users in open source software development: An interpretive case study of user participation
157 -- 187Indira R. Guzman, Jeffrey M. Stanton. IT occupational culture: the cultural fit and commitment of new information technologists

Volume 22, Issue 1

9 -- 25Nathalie Mitev. In and out of actor-network theory: a necessary but insufficient journey
26 -- 35Helen Richardson. Taking a feminist approach to information systems research and using the thinking tools provided by the sociologist Pierre Bourdieu
36 -- 50Neil C. Ramiller, Erica L. Wagner. The element of surprise: appreciating the unexpected in (and through) actor networks
51 -- 62Bruce Rowlands. A social actor understanding of the institutional structures at play in information systems development
63 -- 77Wendy Currie. Contextualising the IT artefact: towards a wider research agenda for IS using institutional theory
78 -- 88Michael J. Davern, Carla Wilkin. Why did they do that? Variability in routine transactions