TY - JOUR A1 - Brennecke, Julia T1 - Media Review: entrepreneurship as networking JF - Organization studies Y1 - 2023 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1177/01708406231200710 SN - 0170-8406 SP - 1 EP - 4 PB - Sage CY - London ER - TY - CHAP A1 - Bindenagel Šehović, Annamarie ED - Govender, Kaymarlin ED - Poku, Nana K. T1 - Protecting the vulnerable BT - human and health security beyond citizenship, exploring the rationale and the possibilities for adolescents T2 - Preventing HIV among young people in Southern and Eastern Africa : Emerging evidence and intervention strategies. - (Routledge Studies in health in Africa ; Vol. 2) N2 - Contemporary pressures of climate change and migration are abetting the spread of (re)emerging infectious diseases (EIDs), including HIV, Ebola and tuberculosis (TB). While the fact remains that any person can become infected, those most affected are vulnerable populations. In Eastern and Southern Africa (ESA) these include marginalized groups such as people who sell sex, LGBTI and MSM, but more widely also adolescents. Adolescents and young adults represent a particularly vulnerable group, caught as they are on the cusp between child protections and adult citizenship claims, including to health and educational provisions and protections. Without, or with incomplete claims, members of marginalized and vulnerable communities are excluded from access to provisions and protections of health as part of human security, whether out of apathy, fear or jurisdiction or through (deliberate) neglect. The chapter proceeds through the framework of human security, which puts the security of individuals at the centre of its analysis. This stands in contrast to the 1990s securitization argument which framed HIV as a threat to state security. This chapter analyzes unique challenges of vulnerable adolescent populations as these relate to HIV prevention and treatment access. In doing so, it pays special heed to the “double vulnerability” of non-citizenship and compromised citizenship among this cohort. By invoking the human security paradigm, this chapter explores HIV interventions as they pertain to and aim to protect vulnerable populations beyond borders. Y1 - 2021 SN - 978-0-429-46281-8 SN - 978-0-429-87076-7 SP - 110 EP - 124 PB - Routledge/Taylor & Francis Group CY - London ; New York ER - TY - CHAP A1 - David, Natalie A. A1 - Coutinho, James A. A1 - Brennecke, Julia ED - Gerbasi, Alexandra ED - Emery, Cécile ED - Parker, Andrew T1 - Workplace friendships BT - antecedents, consequences, and new challenges for employees and organizations T2 - Understanding workplace relationships N2 - Workplace friendships, i.e., when work colleagues are also friends, are a widespread phenomenon in organizations which has attracted increasing research interest in recent decades. Numerous studies have investigated consequences of workplace friendships and found positive outcomes, such as increased employee job satisfaction or organizational performance, as well as negative outcomes, such as decreased knowledge-sharing between different friendship cliques. Other studies have examined what shapes workplace friendships, focusing on determinants such as personality or the spatial composition of organizations. Finally, an increasing number of studies focus on multiplex workplace friendships, where employees who are friends are also linked by a specific work-focused relationship. In this chapter, we first take stock of the literature on workplace friendships by providing an overview of their antecedents and consequences at the individual, the group, and the organizational level, and review the smaller body of research on multiplex workplace friendships. Second, we critically discuss practical implications of workplace friendships, focusing on their relevance to three current challenges for employees and organizations: the increase in virtual work, social inequalities in organizations, and the increased overlap of professional and private life. Finally, we provide recommendations for organizations on how to address these challenges and effectively manage workplace friendships. Y1 - 2023 SN - 978-3-031-16639-6 SN - 978-3-031-16640-2 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-16640-2_11 SP - 325 EP - 368 PB - Palgrave Macmillan CY - Cham ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Becker, Kirstin A1 - Gronewold, Ulfert A1 - Weiß, Katharina T1 - Using legitimacy strategies to secure organisational survival over time BT - the case of EFRAG JF - Accounting and business research N2 - In this paper, we study how the European Financial Reporting Advisory Group (EFRAG) used different legitimacy strategies between 2004 and 2021 to secure its organisational survival. Although EFRAG is now an established player within the regulatory space of corporate reporting, the organisation’s path towards this position was not straightforward. Based on 20 interviews with current and former members of EFRAG and archival documents, we investigate how EFRAG initially gained and maintained its legitimacy and how it responded to a legitimacy crisis arising in the aftermath of the 2008–2009 financial crisis. Based on prior research on organisational strategies for legitimising actions, we derive a framework for our analysis and show how EFRAG has adapted various legitimacy strategies over time. We further find that the use of legitimacy strategies is constrained by various systemic factors and show how EFRAG’s adaptations to its legitimacy strategies led to new tensions. Our findings contribute to the literature on private regulatory organisations’ legitimacy and the political economy of standard setting. KW - EFRAG KW - legitimacy KW - organisational survival KW - regulatory intermediary KW - IFRS Y1 - 2024 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1080/00014788.2024.2346533 SN - 0001-4788 SP - 1 EP - 31 PB - Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group CY - New York ER - TY - CHAP A1 - Mirbabaie, Milad A1 - Rieskamp, Jonas A1 - Hofeditz, Lennart A1 - Stieglitz, Stefan ED - Bui, Tung X. T1 - Breaking down barriers BT - how conversational agents facilitate open science and data sharing T2 - Proceedings of the 57th Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences N2 - Many researchers hesitate to provide full access to their datasets due to a lack of knowledge about research data management (RDM) tools and perceived fears, such as losing the value of one's own data. Existing tools and approaches often do not take into account these fears and missing knowledge. In this study, we examined how conversational agents (CAs) can provide a natural way of guidance through RDM processes and nudge researchers towards more data sharing. This work offers an online experiment in which researchers interacted with a CA on a self-developed RDM platform and a survey on participants’ data sharing behavior. Our findings indicate that the presence of a guiding and enlightening CA on an RDM platform has a constructive influence on both the intention to share data and the actual behavior of data sharing. Notably, individual factors do not appear to impede or hinder this effect. KW - open science practices in information systems research KW - conversational agents KW - data sharing KW - digital nudging KW - open science KW - research data management Y1 - 2024 UR - https://hdl.handle.net/10125/106457 SN - 978-0-99813-317-1 SP - 672 EP - 681 PB - Department of IT Management Shidler College of Business University of Hawaii CY - Honolulu, HI ER - TY - CHAP A1 - Marx, Julian A1 - Brünker, Felix A1 - Mirbabaie, Milad A1 - Stieglitz, Stefan ED - Bui, Tung X. T1 - Digital activism on social media BT - the role of brand ambassadors and corporate reputation management T2 - Proceedings of the 57th Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences N2 - Social media constitute an important arena for public debates and steady interchange of issues relevant to society. To boost their reputation, commercial organizations also engage in political, social, or environmental debates on social media. To engage in this type of digital activism, organizations increasingly utilize the social media profiles of executive employees and other brand ambassadors. However, the relationship between brand ambassadors’ digital activism and corporate reputation is only vaguely understood. The results of a qualitative inquiry suggest that digital activism via brand ambassadors can be risky (e.g., creating additional surface for firestorms, financial loss) and rewarding (e.g., emitting authenticity, employing ‘megaphones’ for industry change) at the same time. The paper informs both scholarship and practitioners about strategic trade-offs that need to be considered when employing brand ambassadors for digital activism. KW - the bright and dark side of social media in the marginalized contexts KW - brand ambassadors KW - digital activism KW - reputation management KW - social media Y1 - 2024 UR - https://hdl.handle.net/10125/107250 SN - 978-0-99813-317-1 SP - 7205 EP - 7214 PB - Department of IT Management Shidler College of Business University of Hawaii CY - Honolulu, HI ER - TY - CHAP A1 - Stieglitz, Stefan A1 - Fromm, Jennifer A1 - Kocur, Alexander A1 - Rostalski, Frauke A1 - Duda, Michelle A1 - Evans, Alison A1 - Rieskamp, Jonas A1 - Sievi, Luzia A1 - Pawelec, Maria A1 - Heesen, Jessica A1 - Loh, Wulf A1 - Fuchß, Christoph A1 - Eyilmez, Kaan T1 - What measures can government institutions in Germany take against digital disinformation? BT - a systematic literature review and ethical-legal discussion T2 - Wirtschaftsinformatik 2023 Proceedings N2 - Disinformation campaigns spread rapidly through social media and can cause serious harm, especially in crisis situations, ranging from confusion about how to act to a loss of trust in government institutions. Therefore, the prevention of digital disinformation campaigns represents an important research topic. However, previous research in the field of information systems focused on the technical possibilities to detect and combat disinformation, while ethical and legal perspectives have been neglected so far. In this article, we synthesize previous information systems literature on disinformation prevention measures and discuss these measures from an ethical and legal perspective. We conclude by proposing questions for future research on the prevention of disinformation campaigns from an IS, ethical, and legal perspective. In doing so, we contribute to a balanced discussion on the prevention of digital disinformation campaigns that equally considers technical, ethical, and legal issues, and encourage increased interdisciplinary collaboration in future research. KW - disinformation campaigns KW - social media KW - ethical implications KW - legal implications KW - government agencies Y1 - 2023 UR - https://aisel.aisnet.org/wi2023/20/ PB - AIS Electronic Library (AISeL) CY - [Erscheinungsort nicht ermittelbar] ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Fromm, Jennifer A1 - Stieglitz, Stefan A1 - Mirbabaie, Milad T1 - Virtual reality in digital education BT - an affordance network perspective on effective use behavior JF - ACM SIGMIS database N2 - Virtual reality promises high potential as an immersive, hands-on learning tool for training 21st-century skills. However, previous research revealed that the mere use of digital tools in higher education does not automatically translate into learning outcomes. Instead, information systems studies emphasized the importance of effective use behavior to achieve technology usage goals. Applying the affordance network approach, we investigated what constitutes effective usage behavior regarding a virtual reality collaboration system in digital education. Therefore, we conducted 18 interviews with students and observations of six course sessions. The results uncover how affordance actualization contributed to the achievement of learning goals. A comparison with findings of previous studies on other information systems (i.e., electronic medical record systems, big data analytics, fitness wearables) allowed us to highlight system-specific differences in effective use behavior. We also demonstrated a clear distinction between concepts surrounding effective use theory facilitating the application of the affordance network approach in information systems research. KW - virtual reality KW - effective use behavior KW - affordance network approach KW - digital education KW - qualitative research Y1 - 2024 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1145/3663682.3663685 SN - 0095-0033 SN - 1532-0936 VL - 55 IS - 2 SP - 14 EP - 41 PB - ACM CY - New York, NY ER - TY - RPRT A1 - Clausen, Sünje A1 - Stieglitz, Stefan A1 - Wloka, Michelle T1 - Between reality & fantasy BT - transforming influencer relations through synthetic media T2 - Communication insights N2 - Synthetische Medien ermöglichen die zunehmend automatisierte Erstellung virtueller Influencer, von denen bereits einige Millionen Follower in sozialen Medien gewonnen haben. Unter der Leitung von Professor Stefan Stieglitz und Sünje Clausen (Universität Potsdam) und in Kooperation mit Sanofi hat ein Forschungsprojekt untersucht, wie computergenerierten Charaktere für die Influencer-Kommunikation im Unternehmensumfeld genutzt werden können. Nähere Informationen zu den Forschungsergebnissen können in der Communication Insights nachgelesen werden: eine kurze Einführung in die Influencer-Kommunikation, potenziellen Vorteile als auch Herausforderungen von virtuellen Influencern, Tipps für den Prozess der Gestaltung und Nutzung eines virtuellen Influencers. Y1 - 2023 UR - https://hdl.handle.net/10419/280991 U6 - https://doi.org/10419/280991 SN - 2749-893X VL - 19 PB - Academic Society for Management & Communication CY - Leipzig ER - TY - RPRT A1 - Stieglitz, Stefan A1 - Zerfaß, Ansgar A1 - Wloka, Michelle A1 - Clausen, Sünje T1 - Communications trend radar 2024 BT - information inflation, AI literacy, workforce shift, content integrity & decoding humans T2 - Communication insights N2 - What does the future hold for corporate communications? The Communications Trend Radar is an applied research project. On an annual basis, it identifies relevant trends for corporate communications from the fields of society, management, and technology. The research team at the University of Potsdam (Professor Stefan Stieglitz, Sünje Clausen, MS.) and Leipzig University (Professor Ansgar Zerfass, Dr Michelle Wloka) identified the following trends for 2024: Information Inflation, AI Literacy, Workforce Shift, Content Integrity, Decoding Humans. More information on the trends can be found in the Communications Trend Radar Report 2024 N2 - Wo steht die Kommunikationsbranche und wohin wird sie sich entwickeln? Der Communications Trend Radar ist eine wissenschaftliche, interessensunabhängige Studie, die jedes Jahr relevante Trends für die Unternehmenskommunikation aus den Bereichen Gesellschaft, Management und Technologie herausarbeitet. Das Forschungsteam der Universität Potsdam (Prof. Dr. Stefan Stieglitz, Sünje Clausen, M.Sc.) und der Universität Leipzig (Prof. Dr. Ansgar Zerfaß, Dr. Michelle Wloka) identifiziert für 2024 die Trends: Information Inflation, AI Literacy, Workforce Shift, Content Integrity, Decoding Humans. Weitere Informationen zu den Trends können im Communications Trend Radar Report 2024 nachgelesen werden. Y1 - 2024 UR - https://hdl.handle.net/10419/284410 U6 - https://doi.org/10419/284410 SN - 2749-893X VL - 20 PB - Academic Society for Management & Communication CY - Leipzig ER -