As indicated last year, The Journal of Strategic Information Systems is dedicating the June issue of JSIS each year to review articles in the realm of strategic information systems, broadly defined. The first Review Special Issue will appear in the June 2019 issue of the journal.
We are now inviting authors to submit proposals for the 2020 Review Issue of JSIS. We seek high-impact scholarly surveys of important research literatures in the strategic information systems domain. Such articles will provide a synthesis of recent research and highlight important directions for future inquiries. The Review Issue is open to proposals concerning established and emerging topics in the field of strategic information systems, including those dealing with research methods relevant for our context.
Proposals should be submitted between June 1, 2018 and July 1, 2018 via JSIS’s online submission portal at: https://www.evise.com/profile/#/JSIS/login. (Please be sure to select “Review Issue:2020” as the submission type.).
Please note that proposals may not be submitted until June 1, 2018.
Proposals should be double-spaced and include no more than ten pages of text. References, tables, and appendices do not count against this page limit. All proposals will be subject to editorial review. Please do not send complete papers. If you already have a draft of your paper, please note that in your proposal.
Submissions will be evaluated with regard to the following criteria:
- Relevance. The proposed manuscript should thoroughly review a significant and important research area within the field of Information Systems that has strategic impact and relevance. We also welcome reviews of important research areas that have yet to make a major impact in the field of Information Systems but argumentation can be made that the area is of strategic significance to the information systems field. Obviously, it is upon the authors to make a strong linkage of the research area to the IS system phenomena.
- Scope of Interest. While papers must contribute to the strategic information systems literature and its developing agenda they must speak to scholars in cognate IS domains and fields, including, for example: Strategic Management, Organization Studies and Knowledge Management. Ethical, policy and societal issues can form an important feature.
- Viability. The proposal should clearly feasible given the tight time constraints in place. More detail on the timeline is provided below.
- Organization and Coherence. The proposal should follow a logical structure, read clearly, and thoroughly and comprehensively represent extant research in the topic area concerned.
- Insight for Future Work. The proposal should convey important implications for future research, both in the context of the chosen topic and for the strategic information systems domain more broadly.
- Timeliness/Contribution. Reviews should normally be on topics for which no recent reviews exist and the proposal should clearly indicate its intended contribution to knowledge. If existing reviews exist, they need to be identified and there needs to be compelling argumentation how the proposed review will contribute to the literature beyond the existing reviews.