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Facing ever-looming climate change, studying the drivers for individuals' Information Systems (IS) Use to reduce environmental harm gains momentum. While extant research on the antecedents of sustainable IS Use has focused on specific theories, interventions, contexts, and technologies, a holistic understanding has become increasingly elusive, with a synthesis remaining absent. We employ a systematic literature review methodology to shed light on the driving antecedents for sustainable IS Use among individual consumers. Our results build on findings of 29 empirical studies drawn from 598 articles retrieved from our premier outlets and a forward/backward search. The analysis reveals six salient complementary antecedents: Relief, Empowerment, Default, User-centricity, Salience, and Encouragement. We recommend considering these concepts when developing, deploying, promoting, or regulating digital technologies to mitigate individual consumers' emissions. Along with memorable and implementable concepts, our theoretical framework offers a novel conceptualization and four promising avenues for researchers on sustainable IS Use.
The proliferation of smart technologies transforms the way individual consumers perform tasks. Considerable research alludes that smart technologies are often related to domestic energy consumption. However, it remains unclear how such technologies transform tasks and thereby impact our planet. We explore the role of technological smartness in personal day-to-day tasks that help create a more sustainable future. In the absence of theory, but facing extensive changes in everyday life enabled by smart technologies, we draw on phenomenon-based theorizing (PBT) guidelines. As anchor, we refer to task endogeneity related to task-technology fit theory (TTF). As infusion, we employ theory on public goods. Our model proposes novel relations between the concepts of smart autonomy and -transparency with sustainable task outcomes, mediated by task convenience and task significance. We discuss some implications, limitations, and future research opportunities.
While there has been increased digitization of private homes, only little has been done to understand these specific home technologies, how they serve consumers, among other issues. “Smart home technology” (SHT) refer to a wide range of artifacts from cleaning aids to energy advisors. Given this breadth, clarity surrounding the key characteristics and the multi-faceted impact of SHT is needed to conduct more directed research on SHT. We propose a taxonomy to help outline the salient intended outcomes of SHT. Through a process involving five iterations, we analyzed and classified 79 technologies (gathered from literature and industry reports). This uncovered seven dimensions encompassing 20 salient characteristics. We believe these dimensions/characteristics will help researchers and organizations better design and study the impacts of these technologies. Our long-term agenda is to use the proposed taxonomy for an exploratory inquiry to understand tensions occurring when personal and sustainability-related outcomes compete.
Venture capital and the innovative power of a state : econometric study including Google data
(2015)
This article focuses on venture capital investments and the innovative power of a state defined by its public infrastructure. The economic implications are evaluated by estimating several panel regression models. The novelty is twofold: on the one hand the research approach and on the other hand the new data set. The data ranges from 1995 to 2014 and consists of 10 European countries plus the US and Canada. For the first time we include Google search data on Venture Capital. The results show a significant increase in Venture Capital is mainly determined by economic conditions such as real GDP growth. The impact of the innovative power of a state is not significant. We find that Google data is positively related and significant in respect to Venture Capital investments too. Consequently, we confirm that private business investments cannot be created by government policy alone rather via solid macroeconomic conditions.
In the last decade, numerous learning factories for education, training, and research have been built up in industry and academia. In recent years learning factory initiatives were elevated from a local to a European and then to a worldwide level. In 2014 the CIRP Collaborative Working Group (CWG) on Learning Factories enables a lively exchange on the topic "Learning Factories for future oriented research and education in manufacturing". In this paper results of discussions inside the CWG are presented. First, what is meant by the term Learning Factory is outlined. Second, based on the definition a description model (morphology) for learning factories is presented. The morphology covers the most relevant characteristics and features of learning factories in seven dimensions. Third, following the morphology the actual variance of learning factory manifestations is shown in six learning factory application scenarios from industrial training over education to research. Finally, future prospects of the learning factory concept are presented.
Michael Wörz erfüllte 26 Jahre lang das Amt und die Aufgabe des Referenten für Technik- und Wirtschaftsethik an den Hochschulen für Angewandte Wissenschaften des Landes Baden-Württemberg. Ihm war die Interdisziplinarität, die diese Aufgaben erfordern würde, in sein berufliches Stammbuch geschrieben. Ein Ingenieur, der Philosophie studierte und dort promovierte, der zudem sein wissenschaftliches Schaffen aus der Perspektive der Theorien eines Soziologen vorantrieb, hatte gelernt, interdisziplinär zu denken und zu arbeiten. Ihm fiel die Aufgabe zu, das zum Überleben künftiger Generationen fachübergreifende, notwendige Wissen in die akademische Ausbildung der Hochschulen für Angewandte Wissenschaften zu tragen, und das hat Michael Wörz über die Jahre seiner Amtszeit wahrlich getan. Neben diesen Aufgaben eines engagierten und innovativen Hochschullehrers war er auch in der Politik ein streitbarer Vertreter der Ethik und der Nachhaltigen Entwicklung, der geholfen hat, den Lehrenden an den Hochschulen den Weg zu bereiten.
Immer deutlicher zeigt sich, dass die Modeindustrie nicht nur vor enormen Herausforderungen steht, sondern dass hiermit auch enorme Umbrüche einhergehen. Vor diesem Hintergrund interessiert uns nicht nur die Frage, was diese Herausforderungen sind, sondern auch, wie sie die Modeindustrie verändern. Unter dem Titel New fashion business wollen wir in diesem Band verstehen, welche Veränderungen bedeutsam sind und wie Unternehmen bereits darauf reagieren bzw. wie sie reagieren könnten.