2134/15190
Richard L. Baskerville
Richard L.
Baskerville
Michael Myers
Michael
Myers
Fashion waves in information systems research and practice
Loughborough University
2014
Innovation
Adoption
Diffusion
Management fashion
Information systems fashion
Fashion setting
Research agenda
Information systems practice
Information Systems
Business and Management not elsewhere classified
2014-07-11 09:09:17
Journal contribution
https://repository.lboro.ac.uk/articles/journal_contribution/Fashion_waves_in_information_systems_research_and_practice/9498134
Building on neo-institutional theory and theories of innovation and diffusion, recent work in the field of management has suggested that management research and practice is characterized by fashions. A management fashion is a relatively transitory belief that a certain management technique leads rational management progress. Using bibliographic research, we apply Abrahamson’s management fashion theory to information systems research and practice. Our findings reveal that information systems research and practice, like management research and practice, is indeed characterized by fashions. These “IS fashion waves” are relatively transitory and represent a burst of interest in particular topics by IS researchers and practitioners. However, while our findings show that IS research closely parallels practice, we suggest that a more proactive engagement of IS academics is needed in the IS fashion-setting process.