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Reach and Grasp
John Leslie King and Kalle Lyytinen
Volume 28, Number 4
Abstract
The short history of
Information Systems suggests persistent anxiety about the field’s
purported lack of academic legitimacy. A common refrain in the
anxiety discourse is that legitimacy can be obtained only by creating a
strong theoretic core for the field. This essay takes
exception with this view, attributing the anxiety to the field’s
relative youth, its focus on technology in a technophobic
institutional environment, and academic ethnocentrism within and
without the field. While developing stronger theory might be
helpful, it is more important that the IS field pushes back against the
hegemony of IS critics outside the field whose arguments masquerade as
concerns about academic quality. The anxiety discourse should be
replaced by the IS field’s aggressive pursuit of new instructional and
research opportunities that cross traditional institutional barriers
and the pursuit of excellence on academic criteria deemed
important by the field itself.
Keywords: Information Systems, identity,
legitimacy, theoretic core, discipline, disciplinary, academic politics
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