Australasian Conference on Information Systems

ACIS Logo

The Australasian Conference on Information Systems (ACIS) is an annual conference for Information Systems and Information Technology academics and professionals and is affiliated with the Australasian Association for Information Systems. ACIS is the premier Information Systems conference within Australia and New Zealand, targeting Information Systems academics and researchers.[1] It covers technical, organisational, business and social issues in the application of Information Technology(IT) to real world problems.[2]

ACIS provides a platform for panel discussions and the presentation of peer-reviewed information systems research papers.[3]

The conference attracts over a hundred submissions each year, and those that are selected for presentation appear in the 'ACIS Proceedings’, which have been archived online since 2001.

The first Australian Conference in Information Systems (ACIS) took place in 1990 at Monash University and was chaired by Ross Jeffery.[4][5] The name was changed to the Australasian Conference on Information Systems in 1994 to reflect the involvement of New Zealand, and attendance stabilised at approximately 250 delegates by 2007,[6] having reached its peak in 2000.[7]

The ACIS logo consists of a digital pixel background pattern with a human hand silhouette and a swooping arrow.

ACIS Venues

The following table displays a list of past and near future ACIS conferences.

Year Place Host Theme
2016, 05 – 07 December Wollongong, Australia University of Wollongong Occupying the Sweet Spot: IS at the Intersection
2015, 30 – 04 December Adelaide, Australia University of South Australia Information Systems in the Age of Big Data
2014, 08 – 10 December Auckland, New Zealand Auckland University of Technology Integral IS: The Embedding of Information Systems in Business, Government and Society
2013, 03 – 05 December Melbourne, Australia RMIT University Information Systems: Transforming the Future
2012, 03 – 05 December Geelong, Australia Deakin University Location, location, location
2011, 30 – 02 November/December Sydney, Australia University of Sydney Identifying the Information Systems Discipline
2010, 01 – 03 December Brisbane, Australia Queensland University of Technology Information Systems: Defining and Establishing a High Impact Discipline
2009, 02 – 04 December Melbourne, Australia Monash University Evolving Boundaries and New Frontiers: Defining the IS Discipline
2008, 03 – 05 December Christchurch, New Zealand University of Canterbury Creating the Future: Transforming Research into Practice
2007, Toowoomba Queensland University of Southern Queensland The 3Rs: Research, Relevance and Rigour - Coming of Age
2006, Adelaide, Australia University of South Australia Thought Leadership in IS
2005, Sydney, Australia University of Technology Sydney Socialising IT: Thinking About the People
2004, Hobart, Australia University of Tasmania Managing New Wave Information Systems: Enterprise, Government and Society
2003, Perth, Australia Edith Cowan University Delivering IT and e-Business Value in Networked Environments
2002, Melbourne, Australia Victoria University Systems: Enabling Organisations and Society
2001, Coffs Harbour, Australia Southern Cross University 2001 IS Odyssey: Where are we going in Cyberspace?
2000, Brisbane, Australia Queensland University of Technology
1999, Wellington, New Zealand Victoria University of Wellington https://web.archive.org/web/20070608222800/http://www.vuw.ac.nz:80/acis99/
1998, Sydney, Australia University of New South Wales
1997, Adelaide, Australia University of South Australia
1996, Hobart, Australia University of Tasmania
1995, Perth, Australia Curtin University of Technology
1994, Melbourne, Australia Monash University
1993, Brisbane, Australia University of Queensland
1992, Wollongong, Australia University of Wollongong
1991, Sydney, Australia University of New South Wales
1990, Melbourne, Australia Monash University

See also

References

  1. Gable, Guy G. (2008). The Information Systems Academic Discipline in Australia, ANU E Press. ISBN 9781921313943. p 371.
  2. Australasian Conference on Information Systems (ACIS) 2011 mission statement http://www.acis2011.org/
  3. ACIS2012 Paper Submission details http://acis2012.deakin.edu.au/paper-submission
  4. Clarke, Roger. A Retrospective on the Information Systems Discipline in Australia Appendix 3B: Timeline - Australian. Xamax Consultancy Pty Ltd, 2007, Retrieved 11 February 2012 http://www.rogerclarke.com/SOS/AISHistApp3B.html
  5. Hirschheim, R; Klien, H. (2011) "Tracing the History of the Information Systems Field" in Galliers, R; Currie, W. eds (2011) The Oxford Handbook of Management Information Systems: Critical Perspectives and New Directions, Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199580583. p 40.
  6. Gable, Guy G. (2008). The Information Systems Academic Discipline in Australia, ANU E Press. ISBN 9781921313943. p 56.
  7. Cheong, F; Corbitt, B. (2009). "A Social Network Analysis of the Co-Authorship Network of the Australasian Conference of Information Systems from 1990 to 2006", in Proceedings of the 17th European Conference on Information Systems (ECIS 2009), Verona, Italy, 8-10 June 2009.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/21/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.