Call for Papers Technological Forecasting and Social Change

Special Issue on “Digital Technology and the Creative Industries: Disassembly and Reassambly” (Full Title)


Guest Editors:

Vincent Mangematin, Grenoble School of Management, France, This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

Jonathan Sapsed, University of Brighton, United Kingdom, This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

Elke Schüßler, Free University of Berlin, Germany, This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

 

Digital technologies fundamentally shake existing business models of creation, transaction, and distribution (disassembly), yet they also offer reassembly through new tools for creativity, new architectures for mass collaboration and user involvement, and the accelerated generation of new market categories. By analyzing the varying roles of digital technology in the creative industries, we hope to better understand complex innovation and transformation processes on a number of levels – from organizational practices to industry structures. – and in a number of spheres – economic, legal, and social – , spanning both national and transnational institutional arrangements.  
We call for theoretical and empirical papers that may be qualitative or quantitative in method. Themes are suggested but not limited to the following areas:
−   How do old business models collapse in organizational terms? What can we learn from detailed case studies? How are new business models discovered, devised and implemented?  What  is the  role  of  private  and  public  actors  in  pursuing  systemic business  model  innovation  strategies?  How  is  the  success  of  these  strategies
assessed?
−   How  do  existing  firms  rejuvenate  through  digital  technologies  and  creative industries?  
−   Which are the actor groups that benefit from digitalization and which lose? What are the effects on the creation and distribution of value?
−   What  is  the  role  of  collective  action  processes  as  seen  in  social  movements  in overcoming rigidities?
−   To  what  extent  are  digital  and  material  organization  forms  substitutes  or complementary?  To  what  extent  are  boundaries  permeable  between  the  different business models?  
−   How  do  organizational  boundaries  and  managerial  practices  change  with  the digitalization of products and processes?  
−   What is the relationship between digital processes and the openness of innovation? Is creation democratized through digital technologies?
−   Which  are  the  impacts  of  digitalization  on  the  world  of  creation?  How  does creation evolve? Which would be the new forms of exhibitions, appropriation, and collection of arts in a digital world?
−   To   what   extent   does   digitalization   transform   the   geography   of   creation? Globalization? Co-creation by distant artists?   
−   How  does  digitalization  compare  to  other  forms  of  technological  innovation  in creative industries?

If you are interested in contributing to this Special Issue, please note that the deadline for submission of full papers is 30th of October 2011. All submitted papers will go through the normal review process and only those that meet the requirements of TFSC will be accepted for publication. Manuscripts should be submitted online via Elsevier's online submission system indicating in the letter that they are for this Special Issue. Please also refer to TFSC's “Guide for Authors” for the styling and formatting guidelines. 

Please note that the guest editors are organizing a track at the EGOS conference in Gotenburg in July 2011. The deadline for the submission of short papers is January 16th, 2011.