Bridging digital borders
Track 1
Track chairs
Track description
The theme of the conference, Bridging Digital Borders, captures the imperative for Information Systems researchers, business leaders, and policymakers to align technological innovation with strategy and policy in an increasingly interconnected world. Digital technologies are rapidly reshaping markets, institutions, and society in ways that build some bridges while burning others. By expanding connectivity, digital technologies have enabled individuals, organisations, and societies to communicate and collaborate across borders at an unprecedented speed and scale. At the same time, digital technologies also introduce new barriers: algorithmic decision-making, the spread of generative artificial intelligence, rules and policies associated with security and privacy, platform and enterprise architecture, and data governance arrangements, for instance, all help define who can, and who cannot, participate, and how such actors can benefit from digital technologies. Bridging digital borders requires more than linking systems or scaling infrastructures. It calls for critical reflection on how these borders arise, whose interests they serve, and whom they disadvantage.
This track calls for submissions that take bridging as their central concern. We welcome research that moves beyond diagnosing the barriers and asymmetries of digital participation to examine the mechanisms, interventions, and conditions through which borders can be bridged. How can organisations design and govern digital systems that are genuinely inclusive? What institutional arrangements and regulatory frameworks best support equitable cross-border data flows? How can the adoption of artificial intelligence be governed in ways that distribute its benefits more broadly? What strategies enable firms and public institutions to navigate the growing complexity of digital governance while remaining open, interoperable, and accountable? These are the kinds of questions this track seeks to address.
By foregrounding the act of bridging, this track aims to generate scholarship that is not onlycritically engaged with the challenges of digital participation but actively oriented towardunderstanding how those challenges can be addressed. We welcome theoretical, empirical, anddesign science contributions, and encourage diverse methodological approaches.
Topics of interest
- Conceptual frameworks to represent and tear down digital borders
- Design and governance approaches to advance meaningful connectivity
- Rethinking inclusion and removing borders as design principles
- Bridging regulatory fragmentation in cross-border data governance and data sovereignty
- Interoperability, platform governance, and enterprise architecture as enablers of digital integration
- Democratisation of digital architecture and infrastructure
- Affective and embodied human-technology connectivity and interactions
- Privacy and cybersecurity frameworks that balance protection with open participation
- Digital sustainability: Social, environmental, and economic consequences of digital borders
- Managing the tensions of unintended consequences of crossing digital borders
- Rethinking global ecosystems across borders
- Principles and technologies for responsible and ethical cross-border collaborations
- Cross-border digital transformation and change management
- Crisis management and resilient digital architectures across borders
- AI-driven healthcare systems and their role in building or removing borders around care
- Digital architectures and their silent role in deciding who participates in innovation ecosystems
Associate editors
Mahd Abouei
University of Manitoba
Malmi Amadoru
University of Sydney
Kirsti Askedal
University of Agder
Ransome Bawack
Audencia University
Cansu Ekmekcioglu
MacMaster University
Attila J Hertelendy
Florida International University
Bijan Khosrawi-Rad
Leuphana University
Stephan Kühnel
Martin-Luther-Universität
Julian Marx
University of Melbourne
Elina Niemimaa
University of Agder
Mairead O’Connor
The University of New South Wales
Jiyong Park
University of Georgia
Sepi Sadeghi
Toronto Metropolitan University
Arman Sadreddin
Concordia University
Yancong Xie
RMIT University
Andrè Hanelt
University of Kassel
Özgün Imre
Kristianstad University
Hendrik Scholta
German University for Administrative Sciences Speyer
Pepe Bellin
Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg
Sandra Zilker
Technische Hochschule Nürnberg Georg Simon Ohm