References for Qualitative / Quantitative IS Research

  1. Adam, F. and M. Healy (2000). A Practical Guide to Postgraduate Research in the Business Area. Dublin, Blackhall Publishing.
  2. Alvai, M. and P. Carlson (1992). "A Review of MIS Research and Disciplinary Development." Journal of Management Information Systems 3(4): 45-62.
  3. Antill, L. (1985). Selection of a Research Method. Research Methods in Information Systems. E. Mumford, G. Fitzgerald, R. A. Hirschheim and A. T. Wood-Harper. Amsterdam, Elisiver Science Publishers: 191-204.
  4. Barki, H., S. Rivard, et al. (1988). "An Information Systems Keyword Classification Scheme." MIS Quarterly 12(2): 298-311.
  5. Barrett, M. and G. Walsham (2004). Making Contributions from Interpretive Case Studies: Examining Processes of Construction and Use. Relevant theory and informed practice: looking forward from a 20-year perspective on IS research: IFIP TC8 WG8.2 20th Year Retrospective, Manchester, England, Dordrecht: Kluwer.
  6. Baskerville, R. L. and J. Pries-Heje (2001). Racing the E-Bomb: How the Internet is Redefining Information Systems Development Methodology. in the Proceedings of: IFIP TC8/WG8.2 Working Conference on Realigning Research and Practice in Information Systems Development: The Social and Organizational Perspective, Boise, Idaho, USA, Kluwer Academic Publishers: Boston.
  7. Bearden, W. O., S. Sharma, et al. (1982). "Sample Size Effects on Chi Square and Other Statistics Used in Evaluating Causal Models." Journal of Marketing Research XIX: 425-430.
  8. Benbasat, I., D. Goldstein, et al. (1987). "The Case Research Strategy in Studies of Information Systems." MIS Quarterly 11(3): 369-386.
  9. Benbasat, I. and R. Weber (1996). "Rethinking "Diversity" in Information Systems Research." Information Systems Research 17(4): 389-399.
  10. Benbasat, I. and R. Zmud (2003). "The Identity Crisis Within the IS Discipline: Defining and Communicating the Discipline’s Core Properties." MIS Quarterly 27(2): 183-194.
  11. Boland, R. J. (1985). Phenomenology: A Preferred Approach to Research on Information Systems. Research Methods in Information Systems. E. Mumford, G. Fitzgerald, R. A. Hirschheim and A. T. Wood-Harper. Amsterdam, Elisiver Science Publishers: 181-190.
  12. Boudreau, M., D. Gefen, et al. (2001). "Validation in Information Systems Research: A State-of-the-Art Assessment." MIS Quarterly 25(1): 1-16.
  13. Bradley, N. (1999). "Sampling for Internet surveys. An examination of respondent selection for Internet research." Journal of the Market Research Society 41(4): 387-395.
  14. Brittain White, K. (1985). Perceptions and Deceptions: Issues for Information Systems Research. Research Methods in Information Systems. E. Mumford, G. Fitzgerald, R. A. Hirschheim and A. T. Wood-Harper. Amsterdam, Elisiver Science Publishers: 227-234.
  15. Brown, S. A., H. Kelley, et al. (2006). "Introduction to Re-Searching Paradigmatic Extensions of Existing Theory: Special Issue." The Data Base for Advances in Information Systems 37(2&3): 8-14.
  16. Carper, W. B. and W. E. Sinizek (1980). "The Nature and Types of Organizational Taxonomies: An Overview." Academy of Management Review 5(1): 65-75.
  17. Chen, W. and R. A. Hirschheim (2004). "A Paradigmatic and Methodological Examination of Information Systems Research from 1991 to 2001." Information Systems Journal 14: 197-235.
  18. Churchhill, G. A. (1979). "A Paradigm for Developing Better Measures of Marketing Constructs." Journal of Marketing Research 16: 64-73.
  19. Claver, E., R. Gonzales, et al. (2000). "An Analysis of Research in Information Systems." Information and Management 37(4): 181-195.
  20. Creswell, J. W. (1998). Qualitative Inquiry and Research Design: Choosing Among Five Traditions. Thousand Oaks, California, Sage Publications.
  21. Culnan, M. J. (1987). "Mapping the Intellectual Structures of MIS, 1980-1985: A Co-Citation Analysis." MIS Quarterly 11(3): 340-353.
  22. Darke, P., G. Shanks, et al. (1998). "Successfully Completing Case Study Research: Combining Rigour, Relevance and Pragmatism." Information Systems Journal 8(4): 273-289.
  23. Denzin, N. K. and Y. S. Lincoln (2000). The Discipline and Practice of Qualitative Research. Handbook of Qualitative Research. N. K. Denzin and Y. S. Lincoln. Thousand Oaks, Sage.
  24. Dexter, L. A. (1970). Elite and Specialized Interviewing. Chicago, IL, USA, Northwestern University Press.
  25. Dillman, R. (1978). Mail and Telephone Surveys: Total Design Method. New York, John Wiley.
  26. Eisenhardt, K. M. (1989). "Building Theories from Case Study Research." Academy of Management Review 14(4): 532-550.
  27. Farhoomand, A. F. (1987). "Scientific Progress of Management Information Systems." DataBase 18(4): 48-56.
  28. Farhoomand, A. F. and D. H. Drury (1999). "A Historiographical Examination of Information Systems." Communications of the Association for Information Systems 1(19).
  29. Fitzgerald, B. and D. Howcroft (1998). Competing Dichotomies in IS Research and Possible Strategies for Resolution. Proceedings of the International Conference on Information Systems (ICIS 98), Helsinki, Finland, Association for Information Systems.
  30. Fitzgerald, G., R. A. Hirschheim, et al. (1985). Information Systems Research Methodology: An Introduction to the Debate. Research Methods in Information Systems. G. Fitzgerald, R. A. Hirschheim, E. Mumford and A. T. Wood-Harper. Amsterdam, Elisiver Science Publishers.
  31. Fornell, C. and F. L. Bookstein (1982). "Two Structural Equation Models: LISREL and PLS Applied to Consumer Exit-Voice Theory." Journal of Marketing Research XIX: 440-452.
  32. Fowler, J. F. (1994). Survey Research Methods. Beverly Hills, CA, Sage Publications.
  33. Gable, G. G. (1994). "Integrating case study and survey research methods: an example in information systems." European Journal of Information Systems 3(2): 112-126.
  34. Galliers, R. D. (1985). In Search of a Paradigm for Information Systems Research. Research Methods in Information Systems. G. Fitzgerald, R. A. Hirschheim, E. Mumford and A. T. Wood-Harper. Amsterdam, Elisiver Science Publishers: 271-286.
  35. Galliers, R. D. (1995). "A Manifesto for Information Management Research." British Journal of Management 6: S45-S53.
  36. Galliers, R. D. (2003). "Change as Crisis or Growth? Toward a Trans-disciplinary View of Information Systems as a Field of Study: A Response to Benbasat and Zmud’s Call for Returning to the IT Artifact." Journal of the Association for Information Systems 4(6): 337-351.
  37. Glass, R. L. and I. Vessey (1995). "Contemporary Application Domain Taxonomies." IEEE Software 12(4): 63-76.
  38. Glass, R. L., I. Vessey, et al. (2002). "Research in Software Engineering: An Analysis of the Literature." Information and Software Technology 44(8): 491-506.
  39. Grover, V., C. C. Lee, et al. (1993). "Analyzing Methodological Rigor of MIS Survey Research from 1980-1989." Information and Management 24: 305-317.
  40. Gunrow, D. (1995). "The Research Design in Organization Studies: Problems and Prospects." Organization Science 6(1): 93-103.
  41. Hansen Hansen, B. and K. Kautz (2005). Grounded Theory Applied – Studying Information Systems Development Methodologies in Practice. Proceedings of the 38th Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences (HICSS’05), Hawaii, US, IEEE.
  42. Hart, C. (1998). Doing a Literature Review: Releasing the Social Science Research Imagination. London, Sage.
  43. Hirschheim, R. A. (1985). Information Systems Epistemology: An Historical Perspective. Research Methods in Information Systems. G. Fitzgerald, R. A. Hirschheim, E. Mumford and A. T. Wood-Harper. Amsterdam, Elisiver Science Publishers: 9-33.
  44. Hirschheim, R. A. and K. Lyytinen (1994). "Editorial: Banning Organizational Secrecy can Threaten Research too." European Journal of Information Systems 3(2): 83-86.
  45. Hufnagel, E. M. and C. Conca (1994). "User Response Data: The Potential for Errors and Biases." Information Systems Research 5(1): 48-73.
  46. Hughes, J. and S. Jones (2003). Reflections on the use of Grounded Theory in Interpretive Information Systems Research. Proceedings of the European Conference on Information Systems (ECIS 2003), Naples, Italy.
  47. Jenkins, A. M. (1985). Research Methodologies and MIS Research. Research Methods in Information Systems. G. Fitzgerald, R. A. Hirschheim, E. Mumford and A. T. Wood-Harper. Amsterdam, Elisiver Science Publishers: 97-109.
  48. Kaplan, B. and D. Duchon (1988). "Combining Qualitative and Quantitative Methods in Information Systems Research: A Case Study." MIS Quarterly 12(4): 570-586.
  49. Kazanchi, D. and B. E. Munkvold (2000). "Is Information Systems a Science? An Inquiry into the Nature of the Information Systems Discipline." The Data Base for Advances in Information Systems 31(3): 24-42.
  50. Kiesler, S. and L. S. Sproull (1986). "Response Effects in the Electronic Survey." Publlic Opinion Quarterly 50: 402-413.
  51. Klein, H. K. and K. Lyytinen (1985). The Poverty of Scientism in Information Systems. Research Methods in Information Systems. G. Fitzgerald, R. A. Hirschheim, E. Mumford and A. T. Wood-Harper. Amsterdam, Elisiver Science Publishers: 123-151.
  52. Klein, H. K. and M. D. Myers (1999). "A Set of Principles for Conducting and Evaluating Interpretive Field Studies in Information Systems." MIS Quarterly 23(1): 67-94.
  53. Korpela, M., A. Mursu, et al. (2001). Two Times Four Integrative Levels of Analysis: A Framework. in the Proceedings of: IFIP TC8/WG8.2 Working Conference on Realigning Research and Practice in Information Systems Development: The Social and Organizational Perspective, Boise, Idaho, USA, Kluwer Academic Publishers: Boston.
  54. Lang, M. (2002). The Use of Web-based International Surveys in Information Systems Research. Proceedings of European Conference on Research Methodology for Business and Management Studies (ECRM 2002), Reading, England, MCIL: Reading.
  55. Lazar, J. and J. Preece (1999). "Designing and implementing Web-based surveys." Journal of Computer Information Systems 39(4): 63-67.
  56. Lee, A. S. (1989). "A Scientific Methodology for MIS Case Studies." MIS Quarterly 13(1): 33-50.
  57. Lee, A. S. and R. L. Baskerville (2003). "Generalizing Generalizability in Information Systems Research." Information Systems Research 14(3): 221-243.
  58. Liebenau, J. and S. Smithson (1994). "Editorial: Secrecy in Case Studies: A Response to Hirschheim and Lyytinen." European Journal of Information Systems 3(2): 83-86.
  59. Lu, T., Y.-Y. Chen, et al. (2006). "Rigor in MIS Survey Research: In Search of Ideal Survey Methodological Attributes." Journal of Computer Information Systems 47(2): 112-123.
  60. Lyytinen, K. (1985). The Critical Theory of Jurgen Habermas as a Basis for a Theory of Information Systems. Research Methods in Information Systems. E. Mumford, G. Fitzgerald, R. A. Hirschheim and A. T. Wood-Harper. Amsterdam, Elisiver Science Publishers: 207-226.
  61. Magidson, J. (1982). "Some Common Pitfalls in Causal Analysis of Categorical Data." Journal of Marketing Research XIX: 461-471.
  62. Malhotra, M. K. and V. Grover (1998). "An Assessment of Survey Research in POM: From Constructs to Theory." Journal of Operations Management 16(4): 407-425.
  63. Marshall, C. and G. B. Rossman (1999). Designing Qualitative Research. California, Sage Publications.
  64. McKelvey, B. (1978). "Organizational Systematics: Taxonomic Lessons from Biology." Management Science 24(13): 1428-1440.
  65. Mertens, D. M. (1999). Research Methods in Education and Psychology: Integrating Diversity with Quantitative and Qualitative Approaches. Thousand Oaks, CA: , Sage Publications.
  66. Miles, M. B. and A. M. Huberman (1994). Qualitative Data Analysis: An Expanded Sourcebook. Thousand Oaks, California, Sage Publications.
  67. Mingers, J. (2001). "Combining IS Research Methods: Towards a Pluralist Methodology." Information Systems Research 12(3): 240-259.
  68. Mingers, J. (2002). "The Long and Winding Road: Getting Papers Published in Top Journals." Communications of the AIS 8: 330-339.
  69. Mingers, J. (2003). "The Paucity of Multimethod Research: A Review of the Information Systems Literature." Information Systems Journal 13(3): 233-249.
  70. Mumford, E. (1985). Researching People Problems: Some Advice to a Student. Research Methods in Information Systems. G. Fitzgerald, R. A. Hirschheim, E. Mumford and A. T. Wood-Harper. Amsterdam, Elisiver Science Publishers: 303-309.
  71. Neuendorf, K. A. (2002). The Content Analysis Guidebook. Thousand Oaks, California, Sage Publications.
  72. Nissen, H. (1985). Acquiring Knowledge of Information Systems: Research in a Methodological Quagmire. Research Methods in Information Systems. G. Fitzgerald, R. A. Hirschheim, E. Mumford and A. T. Wood-Harper. Amsterdam, Elisiver Science Publishers: 37-51.
  73. O’Hear, A. (1989). Introduction to the Philosophy of Science. Oxford, Clarendon Press.
  74. O’Leary-Kelly, S. and R. J. Vokurka (1998). "The Empirical Assessment of Construct Validity." Journal of Operations Management 16(4): 387-405.
  75. Orlikowski, W. and J. J. Baroudi (1991). "Studying Information Technology in Organizations: Research Approaches and Assumptions." Information Systems Research 2(1): 1-28.
  76. Orlikowski, W. J. and C. S. Iacono (2001). "Research Commentary: Desperately Seeking the "IT" in IT Research – A Call to Theorizing the IT Artifact." Information Systems Research 12(2): 121-134.
  77. Palvia, P., E. Mao, et al. (2003). "Management Information Systems Research: What’s There in a Methodology?" Communications of the AIS 11: 289-309.
  78. Pare, G. (2004). "Investigating Information Systems with Positivist Case Study Research." Communications of the AIS 13: 233-264.
  79. Pettigrew, A. M. (1985). Contextualist Research and the Study of Organizational Change Processes. Research Methods in Information Systems. G. Fitzgerald, R. A. Hirschheim, E. Mumford and A. T. Wood-Harper. Amsterdam, Elisiver Science Publishers: 53-72.
  80. Pfeffers, K. and T. Ya (2003). "Identifying and Evaluating the Universe of Outlets for Information Systems Research: Ranking the Journals." Journal of Information Technology Theory and Application 5(1): 63-84.
  81. Pinsonneault, A. and K. L. Kraemer (1993). "Survey Research Methodology in Management Information Systems: An Assessment." Journal of Management Information Systems 10(2): 75-105.
  82. Popper, K. (1963). Conjectures and Refutations: The Growth of Scientific Knowledge. London, Routledge & Kegan Paul.
  83. Popper, K. (1995). A World of Propensities. Bristol Thoemmes Press.
  84. Ramesh, V., R. L. Glass, et al. (2004). "Research in Computer Science: An Empirical Study." The Journal of Systems and Software 70: 165-176.
  85. Remenyi, D. and B. Williams (1995). "Some Aspects of Methodology for Research in Information Systems." Journal of Information Technology 10(3): 191-201.
  86. Rich, P. (1992). "The Organizational Taxonomy: Definition and Design." Academy of Management Review 17(4): 758-781.
  87. Robey, D. (1996). "Diversity in Information Systems Research: Threat, Promise, and Responsibility." Information Systems Research 17(4): 400-408.
  88. Romano, N. C. and J. Fjermestad (2002). "Electronic Commerce Customer Relationship Management: An Assessment of Research." International Journal of Electronic Commerce 6(2): 61-113.
  89. Salant, P.,
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  90. Sanchez, J. C. (1993). "The Long and Thorny Way to an Organizational Taxonomy." Organization Studies 14(1): 73-92.
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  92. Scheepers, R. and H. Scheepers (2003). Contexts of Relevance in Explanatory Case Studies in IS: Ubiquitous Information Technology Implementation in Organisations. Proceedings of International Conference on Information Systems, ICIS 2003, Seattle, Washington, USA, Association for Information Systems.
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  97. Straub, D. W., M. Boudreau, et al. (2004). "Validation Guidelines for IS Positivist Research." Communications of the AIS 13: 380-427.
  98. Straub, D. W. and C. L. Carlson (1989). "Validating Instruments in MIS Research." MIS Quarterly 13(2): 147-169.
  99. Strauss, A. L. (1987). Qualitative Analysis for Social Scientists Cambridge, Cambridge University Press.
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Updated 26th July, ’07