2006 Awards for Excellence

Information Technology & People

ISSN: 0959-3845

Article publication date: 1 October 2006

303

Citation

(2006), "2006 Awards for Excellence", Information Technology & People, Vol. 19 No. 4. https://doi.org/10.1108/itp.2006.16119daa.002

Publisher

:

Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2006, Emerald Group Publishing Limited


2006 Awards for Excellence

The following article was selected for this year’s Outstanding Paper Award for Information Technology & People

‘‘Making sense of e-commerce as social action’’

Marius JansonUniversity of Missouri-St Louis, St Louis, Missouri, USA

Dubravka Cecez-KecmanovicUniversity of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia

Purpose – To provide a social-theoretic framework which explains how e-commerce affects social conditions, such as availability of information and equality of access to information, influences actors’ behavior, shapes e-commerce business models, and in turn impacts industry structure.

Design/methodology/approach – Empirical investigation based on one-hour interviews with owners/ managers of nine vehicle dealerships and six vehicle buyers in a large US metropolitan region. The hermeneutic method of understanding was used, involving a circular process from research design and attentiveness to data, to data collection and interpretation. This circular process exemplified the dialectic relationship between the theoretical framework (derived from Habermas’s Theory of Communicative Action) and empirical data, through which interpretation and theoretical explanations grounded in the data emerged.

Findings – Demonstrates that e-commerce gives rise to increasing competition among the dealers, decreasing prices and migration of competition to price, decreasing profitability of the average dealer, and erosion of traditional sources of competitive advantage. Moreover, e-commerce emancipates and empowers vehicle purchasers while reducing the power of automobile dealers. Research limitations/implications – The research findings focus on the effects of e-commerce on the automobile distribution industry. However, one could argue that a number of the findings extend to other retailing-based industries.

Practical implications – The paper illustrates a research methodology that may be useful to study other e-commerce applications.

Originality/value – This paper illustrates the application of Habermas’s Theory of Communicative Action to studying the effect of e-commerce.

Keywords Electronic commerce, Empowerment, Social action, Social behaviour

This article originally appeared in Volume 18 Number 4, 2005, pp. 311-42, Information Technology & People

The following articles were selected for this year’s Highly Commended Award

‘‘Multiview as social informatics in action: past, present and future’’

Trevor Wood-HarperBob Wood

This article originally appeared in Volume 18 Number 1, 2005, Information Technology & People

‘‘Temporal coordination through communication: using genres in a virtual start-up organization’’

Hyun-Gyung ImJoAnne YatesWanda Orlikowski

This article originally appeared in Volume 18 Number 2, 2005, Information Technology & People

‘‘Interpreting e-government and development: efficiency, transparency or governance at a distance?’’

Claudio Ciborra

This article originally appeared in Volume 18 Number 3, 2005, Information Technology & People

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