Descriptions

Prosumption has been prominent in human history. For more than ten thousands years humans in all societies provided the goods and serviced they needed for their families. They were both producers and consumer of essential goods and services. The industrial revolution, through the division of labor and through specialization, lead to the separation of production and consumption. Capital productivity increased dramatically. We now see how production and consumption are again integrated - fueled by the emergence of digital  platforms that afford users to be both producers and consumers of a variety of goods and services. The panel looks critically at the current state, understanding, and future prospects of prosumption - from both a research and practice perspective.

Moderator: Cathy Urquhart

Professor of Digital Business, Manchester Metropolitan University. Cathy is interested in how the digital can support communities and help solve societal challenges - thus digital technology for social change and sustainability supported by IT.

 

 

 

Panelists

Paul Alvarado Mendoa

Paul specializes in UX and service design. His experience includes consulting for HiQ and assistant researcher at Chalmers University of Technology focusing on design of complex systems. He is the founder and CEO of the value-driven IT company Tensaii AB.

 

 

Kristina Knaving

Kristina Knaving is a senior researcher and interaction designer at RISE, and currently focuses on digital ethics and applied design methodologies. Her earlier research concerned advanced amateurs in marathon running, and this led her to explore different interaction design aspects of enabled and advanced users and consumers, including serious leisure, professional amateurism, prosumption and produsage.

 

 

Ana Ortiz de Guinea

Ana Ortiz de Guinea is an Associate Professor at Deusto Business School (Spain) and at HEC Montréal (Canada) where she holds a Professorship in Strategy and Management of Information Systems. Her research focuses on the adoption, use, and impacts of Information Systems (IS) in individuals, groups, and organizations. Her research has been published in journals such as MIS Quarterly, Journal of Management Information Systems, European Journal of Information Systems, Journal of the Association for Information Systems, Journal of Business Research, and IEEE Transactions on Software Engineering.

 

Dirk S. Hovorka

Dirk S. Hovorka is an Associate Professor in Business Information Systems Discipline at the University of Sydney. His current research seeks to recenter the possible livable worlds which scientific practices bring forth through theory, design practices, and how we think about ‘the future’ in terms of technology, society, and biophysical environments. His research interrogation of the philosophical foundations of Information Systems has been informed by his research Information Systems PhD and Interdisciplinary Telecommunications and Geology MS degrees (University of Colorado, USA). As the recipient of prestigious awards including the Beta Gamma Sigma 2018 Professor of the Year Award (AACSB International Honor Society) and the University of Sydney Wayne Lonergan Award for Outstanding Teaching, Dirk is deeply committed to preparing students for challenges of the future(s) they are entering. Dirk co-authored the AIS 2011 Best Paper "Secondary Design: A Case of Behavioral Design Research". He is a JAIS Senior Editor, a CAIS Associate Editor, and HICSS co-chair of the "Knowing What We Know (Theories in IS)" mini-track.

 

For those who will participate the Industry Innovation Forum ONLY, complete your registration via

ECIS 2019-Registration for Industry Innovation Forum ONLY

Note: The registration price for Industry Innovation Forum is 2000 SEK (Include lunch, coffee, mingle, and attendance to both sessions)