EMERGENT TECHNOLOGIES IN EXTREME CONTEXT: FROM ADAPTATION TO ANTICIPATION?
References
Boukef Charki N., Kalika M. (2006), « La théorie du millefeuille, le rôle du contexte », Systèmes d’Information et Management, vol. 11, n°4, p. 29-54.
de Corbière F. (2011), « SIIO et amélioration de la qualité des données : analyse de la synchronisation des données par catalogues électroniques », Systèmes d’Information et Management, vol. 16, n°3, p. 45-79.
Hällgren M., Rouleau L., de Rond M. (2018), “A matter of life or death: How extreme context research matters for management and organization studies”, The Academy of Management Annals, vol. 12, n°1, p. 111-153.
Gartner, Press releases, June 2nd, 2020, accessed on June 8th 2020, https://www.gartner.com/en/newsroom/press-releases/2020-06-02-gartner-says-worldwide-end-user-spending-on-cloud-based-web-conferencing-solutions-will-grow-nearly-25-percent-in-2020
Godé C. (2015), Team coordination in extreme environment: Work practices and technological uses under uncertainty, ISTE Ltd and John Wiley & Sons Inc, London, ISBN 978-1-848-21913-7, 165p.
Godé C., Melkonian T., Picq T. (2016), « Performance collective : quels enseignements des contextes extrêmes ? », Revue Française de Gestion, vol. 42, n°257, p. 73-78.
Lebraty J-F. (2013), « Editorial. SI et situations extrêmes », Systèmes d’Information et Management, vol. 18, n°1, p. 3-10.
Malakoff Humanis (2020), Etude Télétravail 2020 : Regards croisés Salariés / Entreprises, 3ième édition, mars, https://newsroom.malakoffhumanis.com/assets/synthese-etude-teletravail-2020-2a13-63a59.html?lang=fr
Rotolo D., Hicks D., Martin B.R. (2015), “What is an emerging technology?”, Research Policy, vol. 44, n°10, p. 1827-1843.
Weick K., Sutcliffe K. (2007), Managing the unexpected: Resilient performance in an age of uncertainty, John Wiley & Sons, New York.
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
The author bears the responsibility for checking whether material submitted is subject to copyright or ownership rights (e.g. figures, tables, photographs, illustrations, trade literature and data). The author will need to obtain permission to reproduce any such items, and include these permissions with their final submission.
It is our policy to ask all contributors to transfer for free the copyright in their contribution to the journal owner. There are two broad reasons for this:
- ownership of copyright by the journal owner facilitates international protection against infringement of copyright, libel or plagiarism;
- it also ensures that requests by third parties to reprint or reproduce a contribution, or part of it, in either print or electronic form, are handled efficiently in accordance with our general policy which encourages dissemination of knowledge within the framework of copyright.
In conformity with the French law, the author keeps the 'moral rights' related to the article:
- The 'authorship right': It is the author's right to have his name associated with each publication and exploitation of the article.
- The 'integrity right': It can be claimed by the author if he finds that during an exploitation, his work has been distorted (cutting, reassembly...).