Exploring Divergent Development Paths in Pharmaceutical Supply ChainsWednesday, June 18, 2008, Hotel Golf Libertas, 11:00 - 12:30
Co-chairs: Stefan Klein, Professor for Interorganizational Systems University of Muenster, Germany Kai Reimers, Professor of Information Systems RWTH Aachen University, Germany Presenters: Matthew Guah, Assistant Professor Erasmus University Rotterdam, The Netherlands Robert Johnston, Professor of Information Systems and Organisation University College Dublin, Ireland Reima Suomi, Professor of Information Systems Science to be confirmed Turku School of Economics, Finland Workshop outline The development of interorganizational information systems (IOIS) can be described as a history of collaboration and conflict. Joint activities and solutions are developed while at the same time competition and conflict among competitors or supply chain partners is contained. Yet, latent or manifest conflict often influences the development over time as the partners (re-)consider their positions. In order to extend our understanding of the dynamics of IOIS, the workshop will explore alternative interpretations referring to the same case evidence. The workshop will start with a brief historical reconstruction of two sets of case data of divergent development paths of eOrdering systems linking pharmacies and wholesalers in otherwise similar industry environments. The participants will be invited to provide theoretically grounded interpretations of the findings using different approaches such as
- Path dependency theory;
- Structuration theory;
- Practice theory;
- Innovation and standardization;
- Strategy theory;
- Systems theory;
- Institutional theory.
The format of the workshop will be an open discussion. In a first round, participants will be asked to comment on the empirical evidence and provide their interpretations. In a second round, the workshop will explore possible linkages between the theoretical approaches. It is explicitly intended that participants will not make mini presentations; rather, participants will be encouraged to engage in a debate. At the beginning of each round of discussions, the chairs will take turns in introducing and motivating some of the open issues.
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