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Reminder: JIBS Call for Papers: Interdisciplinary Research in IB

  • 1.  Reminder: JIBS Call for Papers: Interdisciplinary Research in IB

    Posted 09-06-2012 11:03
    CALL FOR PAPERS
    Special Issue of the Journal of International Business Studies

    ADVANCING INTERDISCIPLINARY RESEARCH IN INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS:
    INTEGRATIVE KNOWLEDGE AND TRANSFORMATIVE THEORIES


    Special Issue Editors
    • Joseph L. C. Cheng (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign,
    jlcheng@illinois.edu)
    • Julian Birkinshaw (London Business School, jbirkinshaw@london.edu)
    • Donald Lessard (MIT Sloan School, dlessard@mit.edu)
    • David C. Thomas (University of New South Wales and Simon Fraser
    University, dcthomas@sfu.ca)

    Deadline for submission: January 15, 2013

    Tentative publication date: Spring 2014

    Introduction
    As an academic field of study, International Business (IB) seeks to develop
    comprehensive understanding about the antecedents and consequences of
    business activities that cross national borders. Many of these activities
    occur at multiple levels of observation and are often deeply embedded in
    interlocking layers of differing economic, social, legal, and political
    contexts. Because of this inherent complexity, IB scholars might consider
    adopting an interdisciplinary investigative approach that integrates
    knowledge from two or more disciplines to develop comprehensive frameworks
    that have greater explanatory and predictive power than single-discipline
    based models (Dunning, 1989). This emphasis on the integration or mixing of
    ideas from multiple disciplines is an important requirement as it
    distinguishes interdisciplinary research from multidisciplinary approaches,
    in which a series of separate investigations from different disciplines are
    conducted independently or sequentially with no effort at integration
    (Cantwell & Brannen, 2010; Cheng et al., 2009).

    The proposed special issue aims to advance interdisciplinary research in IB
    with the goal of developing integrative knowledge and transformative
    theories to enhance understanding and improve practice. Our objective is to
    provide a forum for IB scholars to showcase their best interdisciplinary
    work, debate the merits of different approaches to interdisciplinary
    inquiry, and collectively contribute to the development of an
    interdisciplinary paradigm to guide future research.

    Building on the existing literature (e.g., Aboelela et al., 2006; Porter et
    al., 2006; Rosenfield, 1992; Stokols et al., 2003) and as proposed by Cheng
    et al. (2009: 1071), we consider interdisciplinary research to have the
    following three defining characteristics:

    1. The research draws on ideas and/or methods from two or more academic
    disciplines, particularly those based on contrasting assumptions.
    2. As part of the investigative process, these ideas and/or methods are
    integrated or mixed in such ways that together they produce something new
    and useful (in either solving a problem or advancing fundamental
    understanding).
    3. The resulting product and its value-added contribution could not have
    been obtained by relying on ideas and/or methods from any discipline alone.
    Examples of interdisciplinary research can be found in Herbert Simon’s
    (1945) work on bounded rationality that synthesizes ideas from cognitive
    psychology and economics, Douglass North’s (1990) integrative
    socio-political-economic analysis of the co-evolution of institutions and
    national development, and Oliver Williamson’s (1981) transaction cost theory
    that combines ideas from micro economics, contract law, and organizational
    behavior.

    We encourage submissions that demonstrate synthetic capabilities for the
    development of integrative themes and theories, particularly those that
    generate conceptual novelty and variety, not just a better comparative
    understanding of established theories or ideas taken from different
    disciplines. We also welcome papers that develop interdisciplinary themes
    that extend and enrich established IB theories, thus helping to expand their
    potential application and usefulness. To be considered for this issue,
    papers must address an issue of importance to IB scholars and provide a
    clear demonstration of the benefit of the interdisciplinary approach taken
    relative to addressing the issue from the perspective of a single
    discipline.

    A paper development workshop, for submissions in the revise-and-resubmit
    stage, will be held in conjunction with the 2013 AIB meeting in Istanbul,
    Turkey.


    Topics
    Specifically, the special issue seeks submissions that synthesize ideas from
    two or more academic disciplines to develop and apply interdisciplinary
    concepts and/or theories to study important IB phenomena. The phenomena
    studied can be existing (old) or emerging (new), single- or multi-layer
    embedded, or manifest in any other form as long as they are international or
    cross-border in nature and relate to the study domain of the IB field
    (please see the JIBS Statement of Editorial Policy at www.jibs.net). The
    following are some illustrative topics suitable for inclusion in the special
    issue:

    • Original research that integrates basic assumptions and theoretical
    arguments from economics (e.g., agency theory or transaction cost) and
    sociology (e.g., institutional theory or social network) to study foreign
    market entry and subsidiary management.
    • Investigations that synthesizes ideas from economics, political science,
    and international relations to study global governance issues and how MNCs
    respond to the new globally coordinated, regulatory environment resulting
    from the 2008 global financial crisis.
    • Research that draws on linguistics, cognitive theory, or social identity
    to link cultural context to the behavior of managers and employees in the
    complex and dynamic environment of the multinational enterprise.
    • Interdisciplinary empirical investigations that triangulate qualitative
    and quantitative techniques in unpacking multiple layers of interrelated
    contextual processes that affect MNCs operating in national settings with
    differing economic, political, social, and cultural systems.
    • Research that conceptualizes and delineates the salient dimensions
    (economic, political, social, and cultural) of the changing global business
    environment since the 2008 global financial crisis and their likely effects
    on the international competitiveness of firms from emerging economies.
    • Studies that examine the interdependence between formal
    (political/legal/economic) and informal (social/cultural) institutions and
    how their co-evolution over time affects organizational form and business
    practice in different nations and societies.
    • Interdisciplinary inquiries into the role of religion in the “new
    terrorism” (Enders & Sandler, 2006) and how it affects international
    business and MNCs’ response to security threats against foreign investments
    and subsidiary operations.

    Please note that the special issue will not publish submissions that merely
    show a cataloguing of (or a causal diagram outlining) the various concepts
    or theories from different disciplines that could explain the phenomenon
    under study (see discussion of “kitchen sink papers” in Buckley & Lessard,
    2005). To be accepted, the paper must include a detailed analysis and
    delineation of how these concepts or theories are actually synthesized or
    mixed to develop integrative knowledge that provides a clear value-added
    contribution to the literature.


    Submission Process
    All manuscripts will be reviewed as a cohort for this special issue.
    Manuscripts must be submitted in the window between January 3, 2013, and
    January 15, 2013, at http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/jibs. All submissions
    will go through the JIBS regular double-blind review process and follow the
    standard norms and processes.

    For more information about this call for papers, please contact the Special
    Issue Editors or the JIBS Managing Editor (managing-editor@jibs.net).


    References
    Aboelela, S. W., Larson, E., Bakken, S., Carrasquillo, O., Formicola, A.,
    Glied, S. A., Haas, J., & Gebbie, K.M. 2006. Defining Interdisciplinary
    Research: Conclusions from a Critical Review of the Literature. Health
    Services Research, 42(1), 329–346.
    Buckley, P. J., & Lessard, D. 2005. Regaining the edge for international
    business research. Journal of International Business Studies, 36(6):
    595–599.

    Cantwell, J., & Brannen, M. Y. 2011. Positioning JIBS as an
    interdisciplinary journal. Journal of International Business Studies, 42(1):
    1–9.

    Cheng, J. L. C., Henisz, W., Roth, K., & Swaminathan, A. 2009. Advancing
    interdisciplinary research in the field of international business:
    Prospects, issues, and challenges. Journal of International Business
    Studies, 40(7): 1070–1074.

    Dunning, J. H. 1989. The study of international business: A plea for a more
    interdisciplinary approach. Journal of International Business Studies,
    20(3): 411–436.

    Enders, W., & Sandler, T. 2006. The political economy of terrorism.
    Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

    North, D. C. 1990. Institutions, institutional change and economic
    performance. New York: Cambridge University Press.

    Porter, A. L., Rosessner, J. D., Cohen, A. S., & Perreault, M. 2006.
    Interdisciplinary research: Meanings, metrics and nurture. Research
    Evaluation, 15(3): 187–195.
    Rosenfield, P. L. 1992. The potential of transdisciplinary research for
    sustaining and extending linkages between the health and social sciences.
    Social Science and Medicine, 35(11): 1343–1357.
    Simon, H. A. 1945. Administrative behavior. New York: Free Press.
    Stokols, D., Fuqua, J., Gress, J., Harvey, R., Phillips, K.,
    Baezconde-Garbanati, L., Unger, J., Palmer, P., Clark, M. A., Colby, S. M.,
    Morgan, G., & Trochim, W. 2003. Evaluating transdisciplinary science.
    Nicotine & Tobacco Research, 5: S21–S39.
    Williamson, O. E. 1981. The economics of organization: The transaction cost
    approach. American Journal of Sociology, 87(3): 548–577.


    About the Guest Editors
    Joseph L. C. Cheng is Professor of International Business at the University
    of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He is also Principal Investigator and
    Founding Director of The CIC Center for Advanced Study in International
    Competitiveness sponsored by the Committee on Institutional Cooperation
    (CIC), a university consortium of the Big Ten Conference members and the
    University of Chicago with a combined annual R&D budget of over $7.5
    billion. During the 2011-12 academic year, Cheng is on sabbatical visiting
    at the University of Michigan Ross School of Business and the Shorenstein
    Asia-Pacific Research Center at Stanford University.

    Cheng received his PhD in Business Administration from the University of
    Michigan. His current research interests include strategy and organization
    design for transnational firms, global competition and multinational
    management, foreign R&D investment, national innovation and technology
    policies, and Asian economies. He has published in leading U.S. and European
    academic journals, including the Academy of Management Journal,
    Administrative Science Quarterly, European Journal of International
    Management, Human Relations, Journal of International Business Studies,
    Journal of Management, Management International Review, Management Science,
    and Organization Studies, among others.

    Cheng is a former Chair of the Academy of Management International
    Management Division, and currently serves as a Consulting Editor for the
    Journal of International Business Studies and a Senior Editorial Consultant
    to the European Journal of International Management. He was the lead
    Co-Editor of the research annual Advances in International Management during
    1996-2009, and received the 2009 Leading Book Series Editor Award (with Mike
    Hitt) from its publisher Emerald Group Publishing.

    Julian Birkinshaw is Professor and Chair of Strategic and Entrepreneurship
    at the London Business School, and co-founder of the Management Lab.  He is
    a Fellow of the Academy of International Business and the Advanced Institute
    of Management Research (UK).  He has PhD and MBA degrees in Business from
    the Richard Ivey School of Business, University of Western Ontario, and a
    BSc (Hons) from the University of Durham.   

    Birkinshaw’s main area of expertise is in the strategy and management of
    large multinational corporations, and on such specific issues as corporate
    entrepreneurship, innovation, subsidiary-headquarters relationship,
    knowledge management, network organisations, and global customer management.
    He is the author of eleven books, including Reinventing Management (2010),
    Giant Steps in Management (2007), Inventuring: Why Big Companies Must Think
    Small (2003), and Entrepreneurship in the Global Firm (2001), and over fifty
    articles.   His research has also been published in such journals as
    Strategic Management Journal, Academy of Management Review, Academy of
    Management Journal, Journal of International Business Studies, and Harvard
    Business Review.

    Donald Lessard is the Epoch Foundation Professor of International Management
    at the MIT Sloan School of Management. He studies project management, global
    strategic management, and international finance and teaches courses on
    global strategy and strategic opportunities in the energy sector.
    Currently on sabbatical, Lessard has just completed his term as co-chair of
    the MIT Energy Education Task Force, which has just launched an
    Institute-wide energy minor for undergraduates that spans science,
    technology, and the social sciences and management; and as the faculty
    director of the Sloan Fellows Program and the newly launched MIT Executive
    MBA.
    He has published extensively on risk management, global strategy, and
    international corporate finance. His most recent book is Strategic
    Management of Large Engineering Projects: Shaping Institutions, Risks, and
    Governance (with Roger Miller, MIT Press, February 2001). Lessard is a
    graduate of Stanford University (BA Hispanic American Studies), MBA, and PhD
    (Stanford Business School) and has been on the faculty of MIT since 1973
    David C. Thomas is currently Professor of International Management and
    Director of the Centre for Global Workforce Strategy at Simon Fraser
    University, Vancouver, Canada. In 2012 he will take up a Professorship in
    the Australian School of Business, University of New South Wales, Sydney,
    Australia. He received his PhD in International Business from the
    University of South Carolina.
    Thomas is the author of eight books including the best selling Cultural
    Intelligence: Living and Working Globally (2009, Berrett-Koehler Publishers,
    with Kerr Inkson). His book Cross-Cultural Management Essential Concepts
    (2008, Sage Publications) was the winner of the R. Wayne Pace Human Resource
    Development book of the year award for 2008. In addition, he has recently
    edited (with Peter B. Smith and Mark Peterson) The Handbook of
    Cross-Cultural Management Research from Sage Publications. His research on
    cross-cultural interactions in organizational settings has appeared in
    numerous journals.
    Thomas is currently the Cross-Cultural Management Area Editor of the Journal
    of International Business Studies and serves on the editorial boards of the
    Journal of World Business, Journal of Organizational Behavior, and European
    Journal of Cross-Cultural Competence and Management. His previous academic
    postings have included positions at The Pennsylvania State University and
    The University of Auckland, New Zealand, where he was also Director of the
    Master of International Business Program. He has held visiting positions at
    Koç University, Istanbul, Turkey, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, the
    University of Hawaii, Massey University, New Zealand, and ESCEM, Tours,
    France.


    -------------------
    Anne Hoekman
    Managing Editor, Journal of International Business Studies
     
    JIBS Editorial Office
    Academy of International Business
    Michigan State University
    Tel: +1-517-481-3518
    Fax: +1-517-432-1009
    Email: managing-editor@jibs.net
    Web: www.jibs.net
     
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