Oh whadda June
June 19, 2008 on 8:51 am | In Uncategorized | No CommentsLast couple of weeks were hectic, to say nothing less.
So in second half of May I finally found the time to revise my MPhil according to the (very favorable) reviewers’ comments I received in April 08, do all the administration with regards to this and submit the hard-bound and final thesis to the IRIS institute at University of Salford. ‘Been ready to get that degree for the last year since I wrapped it up :D :D :D I am pleased with what I did and am looking forward to the MPhil degree awarded by this institution which is one of the rare UK’s 6* research rating institutes.
Another big thing needed a final revision. My Int Journal of Information Management submission which I have coauthored with colleagues from Kyungpook National University, Daegu, Korea. We have had a very nice case study with Samsung Electronics while I was in Korea, we wrote it down, submitted, and has now already been accepted for publication in this highly acclaimed SCI indexed journal. The paper is about organizational change related to knowledge management practices, learning from practice about innovation deployment and adoption, and reflecting practical experience to the most recent existing research out there. The paper is forthcoming in the October issue of IJIM. Gratitude to all the people who were involved in publication - coauthors Gyewan Moon and Katharina Uthicke from Daegu, Samsung Electronics Gumi Korea for access, journal’ case editor Prof Dr Ray Hackney, reviewers, and the editor Prof Dr Phillip Hills. It was a steep learning curve in all aspects.
Moving on I had two extensive reviewing roles, one for ICIS 2008 and the other for JASIST. I really need to learn how to do a decent review faster :/ Hopefully at least they were decent enough for the editors and authors.
It was also about time to get my hands and finish writing my forthcoming book which I coauthored together with Peter Vre?ar: Business process informatization and decision support with MS Access 2007 that is being published by Pasadena, the biggest Slovene publisher and distributor of books for the information age. So I managed to have this done tonight and ticked another big project off. Time to celebrate.
Plus, we’ve been busy re-designing our flat, as the baby is coming any time now. Yippie!!!
Whadda June. And it’s just good half way through :O
To Codify or Collaborate - CFP
June 4, 2008 on 10:25 pm | In Uncategorized | No CommentsDeadline for special issue on KM technologies: To Codify or to Collaborate is due end of August. Do consider contributing your finest work. I act as one of the associate editors for this special issue and we have esteemed board of reviewers and editors that will do their best to help promising submissions to be developed to top quality.
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CALL FOR PAPERS
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Issue Title: Knowledge Management and e-Research Technologies: to Codify or to Collaborate?
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Special Issue of “Knowledge Management Research & Practice”
http://www.palgrave-journals.com/kmrp/index.html
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Guest Editors:
Will Venters, London School of Economics
Elaine Ferneley, Salford Business School
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Key dates:
Deadline for submission 30th August 2008
Publication August 2009
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This special issue of KMRP, to appear in 2009, will focus on the role of technology within wider debates on knowledge management. Information and Communication technologies lend themselves to the capture, transfer and storage of data, and hence have, until recently, been strongly aligned with either objectivist view of knowledge management as codification of knowledge in databases, or a limited behaviourist view as communication and collaboration tools in support of social practices. The aim of this special issue is to explore in depth the relationship between social practice and Knowledge Management technologies (broadly defined) in particular questioning the traditional dichotomy between codification and collaboration through knowledge management technology.
Our aim is to bring together research on the KM technology artefact, and research on social KM practices in order to enrich our understanding of social knowledge management technology. In particular we wish to explore and extend the traditional view that technology can only deal with explicit, codifiable knowledge. Instead we argue that, if knowledge is socially constructed, then the technologies that now shape our world must also be given due consideration within any debate on knowledge management. We would be interested in research which considers, for example, how technologies such as mobile phones, Personal Digital Assistants and Geographical Positioning Systems have fundamentally reshaped the milieu of our lives, and hence their implications for Knowledge Management. Expanding our focus we include debates concerning the use of technology in research (so called e-science or e-research) in which new computer systems are drawn upon in the discovery (or construction) of knowledge in the sciences and social sciences. We are interested in the emergence of Web 2.0 and social networking sites which are poised to fundamentally change the interactions between individuals, groups and organisations. Finally, as agreement on standards and data interchange formats are emerging so the vision of the semantic web is becoming a reality allowing disparate, heterogeneous data sources to be interrogated and leveraged from using and supporting ontologies and taxonomies - so technology is ceasing to be an externality and the possibility of a semantically rich, globally networked environment to support knowledge management initiatives is becoming a reality.
This special issue therefore aims to attract theoretical and empirical papers that consider the embedding of technology (in various forms) within the social practices and interactions of individuals, and the resultant effects on, and opportunities for, knowledge management theories and practice.
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Potential Topics:
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We welcome papers from a range of perspectives, potential topics include …
* Relationships between knowledge management and web2.0.
* The use of the semantic web in knowledge management initiatives.
* The growth of global information in society and its impact on organizational knowledge management practice.
* The use of technology as a medium of social networking, differing social networking models, social networking models that enable or inhibit knowledge sharing.
* The application of ontologies, or taxonomies and the emergence of folksonomies as collaboratively constructed taxonomies (e.g. http://del.icio.us/) for supporting knowledge management.
* The weaving of technology with narrative and storytelling.
* Social construction of knowing through technology.
* Social construction of knowledge management technologies.
* e-Science, e-Research and Grid technologies and their potential impact on collaboration and knowledge management within research practice.
* The role of e-science and cyber-infrastructure in scientific and social science knowledge.
* Issues of demographics, age, gender, sexuality and technologies role as shield or mediator within the design of knowledge management technologies.
* How technology supports communities.
* The use of technology to share knowledge around difficult and sensitive topics - to break down social barriers, engender trust and enable wider learning
* Philosophical perspectives on knowledge management technologies e.g. the role of knowing in artificial intelligence; the tacit dimension of knowing mediated through technology;
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Associate Editors:
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* Peter Baloh, Ljubljana, Slovenia
* Laurence Brooks, Brunel, UK.
* Mike Cushman, LSE, UK.
* Magda Hercheui, LSE, UK.
* Annemette Kjaergaard, Copenhagen Business School, Denmark.
* Giovan-Francesco Lanzara, Università di Bologna, Italy.
* Aurelio Ravarini, Cattaneo, Italy.
* Steve Sawyer, Penn State, USA.
* Duane Truex III, Georgia State, USA
* Bob Wood, Manchester University, UK.
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Submission
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Papers should be submitted online at http://www.theorsociety.com and must comply with the KMRP Instructions to Authors at: http://www.palgrave-journals.com/kmrp/author_instructions.html - especially the requirement that author names should not appear anywhere in the manuscript file that is submitted. Normal KMRP reviewing procedures and standards will apply.
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The Guest Editors will be happy to answer any queries from potential authors.
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