The
2nd International Workshop on
Human Resource Information Systems
(HRIS 2008)
12-13 June, 2008 - Barcelona
- Spain
In conjunction with the 10th
International Conference on Enterprise Information Systems (ICEIS
2008)
Co-Chairs
Huub Ruël
University of Twente, The Netherlands
h.j.m.ruel@utwente.nl
Rodrigo Magalhaes
Kuwait-Maastricht Business School, Kuwait
Rodrigo@kmbs.edu.kw
Background and Goals
After a very successful 1st International Workshop on Human Resource
Information Systems in Madeira, Portugal, it became clear that the
journey of discovery into this new area of academic endeavour had to
continue.
Human Resource Information Systems have been a
subject of academic study for about two decades. However since the
end of the 1990’s this subject has grown in importance as the
widespread application of web technology has given a boost to the
development of web-based HRISs. With the use of web technology,
HRISs have crossed the borders of the HR department and have began
to impact the wider organization: senior management, line managers
and last but for sure not least, employees. With this development
studying HRIS has become more complex, with HRISs evolving into
information systems entangled with all aspects of organization. In
other words, HRISs cannot be seen just as a technology but as the
result of the integration of ICT and organization. This perspective
provokes the emergence a whole new array of research topics for this
field.
Starting from the assumption that HRISs are
concerned with people management, it is apparent that the research
topics covered by this subject can be very broad indeed. So, what
are HRISs? In our view, HRISs are no different from other types of
information systems in terms of their basic definition, i.e. complex
social objects which are the outcome of the embedding of computer
systems into an organization and where the technical from the social
factors are not possible to take apart due to the cultural values
and the political interests intervening alongside technological
potentialities and constraints, in the development of the system.
Regarding, the purposes of HRIS, we suggest the
following three groups:
-
Operational
The execution of all the basic HRM practices (e.g. payroll,
recruitment, training or appraisal systems)
-
Tactical
The integration, coordination and control of all the basic HRM
policies and practices (e.g. intranet)
-
Strategic
Contribution towards the organization’s strategy (e.g. systems
providing strategic information, strategic data mining, enabling
innovation, providing feedback on strategic performance or
facilitating change)
The technological systems (i.e. ICT) which
support the above purposes are the concern of two broad communities:
a community of users and a community of providers. The community of
users are the HR specialists who know about the use given to the ICT
application. The community of providers are the systems engineers
whose expertise is in designing, developing, implementing and
maintaining the information systems that the users use.
Traditionally, these two communities do not talk much to each other.
HR work in organizations follows processes which
are well known to HR specialists in terms of day-today execution.
However, when such work is mediated by ICT applications the
processes need to be made explicit and this where the systems
engineers come in. Systems engineers are expert in the modelling of
processes, but they have only a vague knowledge of the of day-to-day
execution. On the other hand, most HR specialists have a very
sketchy understanding of process modelling. This is why the dialogue
between the two communities becomes difficult.
Lately, ICT specialists have gone one step up and
they have become interested in organizational modelling within a
discipline called Organizational Engineering (OE). OE aggregates
multi-disciplinary concepts, methods and technology to model,
develop and analyze various aspects of changing organizations. One
of its major concerns is to understand the enterprise architecture
and the relationships between business strategy, business processes
and the business support systems in order to create and keep the
alignment between these complementary domains.
In order to overcome the huge gap between supply
and demand a better understanding or, in other words, a new language
is needed by both communities. As an example, enterprise
architecture might provide an opportunity for a language understood
by both HR and ICT specialists. Enterprise architecture is no more
than a modelling technique which can be expressed in more technical
terms or in a more natural language that everybody understands. Once
a common language is established, both communities will be able to
talk, with the HR specialists expressing the organizational needs
(demand) and the ICT specialists putting forward the technological
offer (supply). In order to be effective such a language needs to be
not so technical that only the ICT folk will understand it nor so
unstructured that it will be impossible to operationalize it in
terms of automated systems.
The workshop is aimed at advancing research and
practice in HRIS by bringing together the two communities discussed
above to explore new understandings around the theme engineering the
organization for people management. Such exploration will be carried
out with two key objectives:
(1) finding out how the perspectives of the
two communities converge or diverge in terms of research
objectives, methodologies and results.
(2) identifying research areas or topics where members of the
two communities might work together
Topics of interest
We welcome both theoretical and practical papers related
to aspects such as:
• Development and Implementation of HRIS
• HRIS and Enterprise Architectures
• Dynamic Enterprise Architectures
• The impact of real-time information on HRIS
• Visual management and HRIS
• The role of HRIS in Knowledge Management
• IT-user interaction in HRIS project management
• Requirements elicitation and validation for HRM information
systems
• Process modelling and HRIS
• Organizational modelling and HRIS
• The limits of organizational modelling
• Ethical issues of organizational modelling
• Enterprise integration requirements versus HRM needs
• The relationship between HRIS developers and users
• The impact of HRIS on organizational learning
• HRIS and the HR function
• Organization strategy, HRM, and modelling of HR processes
• Process modelling for HRIS and organizational change
• Sourcing and process modelling
Categories of papers
Two main categories of submission will be considered: 1) regular
papers and 2) work in progress by PhD students.
The best papers will be selected for a special
issue of the
International Journal of Business Information Systems.
Submission of Papers
Prospective authors are invited to submit papers in any of the areas
listed above. All papers must be written in English, and the length
of the paper should not exceed 5,000 words or 10 pages (including
figures and tables). Papers (in PDF format) should be submitted
online through the online submission system. Instructions for
preparing the manuscripts are available at the ICEIS web-site:
http://www.iceis.org/ In addition, an e-mail must be sent to
both co-chairs of the Workshop indicating the title of the submitted
paper and the area of interest.
Format
The Workshop will consist of oral presentations of peer-reviewed
papers and invited speeches.
Workshop Proceedings
All accepted papers will be published in a workshop proceedings book
with an ISBN#, which will be issued by INSTICC Press. The
proceedings will be available at the time of the workshop.
Important Dates
Paper Submission:
Deadline Expired
Author Notification:
Deadline Expired
Final Camera-Ready and Registration: Deadline
Expired
Workshop Program Committee
Jose Tribolet, Portugal
Bernard Fallery, France
Mark Lankhorst, The Netherlands
Michel Delorme, Kuwait
Stefan Strohmeier, Germany
Jos Benders, The Netherlands
Hilkka Poutanen, Finland
Marielba Zacarias, Portugal
Reima Suomi, Finland
Graeme Martin, UK
Tanya Bondarouk, The Netherlands
Miguel R. Olivas-Lujan, Mexico / US
Ronald Batenburg, The Netherlands
Joe Peppard, UK
Klaas Sikkel, The Netherlands
Workshop Location
The workshop will take place in conjunction with the 10th
International Conference on Enterprise Information Systems (ICEIS
2008) in Barcelona - Spain.
Registration Information
At least one author of an accepted paper must register for the
workshop. If the registration fees are not received by April 14,
2008, the paper will not be published in the proceedings.
Attending the Workshop requires registration. For
registering go to
http://www.iceis.org Secretariat
ICEIS 2008 Secretariat - The Second International Workshop on Human
Resource Information Systems (HRIS 2008)
E-mail:
workshops@iceis.org
Web site:
http://www.iceis.org |