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Bollymizwid and BollyraĂŻ: Digital Mash-ups of Hindi, Tunisian, and Algerian Popular Music
The transnational consumption of Hindi popular cinema (referred to commonly as "Bollywood") and its narrative film music figures prominently as an element of globalized cultural production through popular media. While scholars have noted the importance of Hindi films in defining local and global identities and aesthetics both in India and abroad, little attention has been given to the animations of Bollywood within transnational digital social networks, especially via popular music genres and highly accessible media, such as YouTube and music blogs. This paper analyzes how Bollywood is re-signified and attuned to popular and underground music in Tunisia and Algeria in its contextualization on the Internet. My research focuses on the relationship between Hindi film songs and Tunisian and Algerian styles of popular music (mizwid and raĂŻ, respectively), as well as the implications behind the digital "mashups" (or mixing) of these genres. The majority of mizwid and raĂŻ music videos on YouTube, for example, are visually represented not by the original performer, but by well-known scenes from Hindi films. These juxtapositions (referred to informally as Bollymizwid or BollyraĂŻ) â as well as the re-arrangements, fragmentations, and redefinitions representative of Hindi film songs, of mizwid, and of raĂŻ â represent a critical juncture in the creation of cosmopolitan identities and counter-public spheres through the digital manipulation of a transnational musical and visual medium. Indeed, the transnational flow of popular music genres within digital public spheres redraws lines of selfhood and nationhood, complicating the ways in which individuals access and perform cosmopolitanism. Encompassing the transnational movements of digital media, this study examines the routes by which BollyraĂŻ and Bollymizwid access and correspond to South Asian popular culture, as well as the dialogues of cosmopolitanism between Algerians and Tunisians both "at home" and in the Francophone diaspora
Where Do Theories Come From? An Inference-to-the-Best-Explanation Theory of Theory Building (IBET)
This paper presents a theory of theory building and testing called IBET that is based primarily on Liptonâs 2004 book âInference to the Best Explanationâ. First, IBET argues that theories are ideas invented (not discovered) by people to explain how some part of the world works. Second, IBET argues that the goal in theory building is to abduce from the available evidence (including data, the literature, and the theory builderâs personal beliefs) an explanation that provides the researcher with their best understanding of why the phenomena of interest occur. Finally, IBET distinguishes between abductive testing of theories, where the information used for theory building is used for testing, and independent-data testing, where independently collected data are used for assessing the validity of a theory. In the last quarter of the paper, IBET is compared to three rival theories of theory building: (a) Grounded Theory, (b) Eisenhardtâs theory building from case studies, and (c) Shepherd and Suddabyâs recent advice on theory building. The conclusion is that IBET seems to provide a more in-depth, broad-scope, explanation of theory building than these rival theories
Benefits from CRM Based Work Systems
This paper explores the benefits of CRM-based work systems, and how these benefits are achieved, based on the content analysis of five case study organisations using CRM packaged software. Four main categories of benefits from CRM-based work systems are identified and discussed: improved customer-facing processes; improved management decisions; improved customer service; and increased business growth. These categories are contrasted to benefits frameworks developed by other researchers for ERP-based work systems. The most frequently mentioned benefits identified in this study are (a) access and capture customer information; (b) increased productivity from headcount reductions and other process efficiencies;(c) integration of processes, data and technology;(d) increased sales activities; and (e) more personalised and responsive service to customers. Though benefits (b) and (c) are similar to those for ERP systems, benefit categories (a), (d) and (e) are unique to CRM-based systems
Generalization in is Research: A Critique of the Conflicting Positions of Lee & Baskerville and Tsang & Williams
This paper is a companion to the paper on generalization in IS research by Williams and Tsang published in this edition of the Journal of Information Technology. Its purpose is to discuss the implications of the robust exchange of views about the meaning of the term âgeneralizationâ in four papers, two by Lee and Baskerville, and two by Tsang and Williams. The objectives of this paper are, first, to help the reader understand the issues by summarizing the arguments in the four papers, and second, to assess the implications of the debate for future IS research. Our conclusion is that when the papers are interpreted from the perspectives of the respective pairs of authors, most of what they say is sound. However, because their perspectives are so different, their differences of opinion are also very real. As a way of showing that neither pair of authorsâ conception of generalization is the âlast wordâ on this topic, the paper also compares key concepts from both pairs of authors with those from Seddon and Scheepers. It is argued that although the Seddon and Scheepersâ framework is also not the âlast wordâ, it may prove more useful than either of the two preceding frameworks
âBetting on the Houseâ: Value Creation by Insourcing at Crown Limited
While the outsourcing of information technology has featured heavily in IS research and practice, the alternative strategy of insourcing has received comparatively little attention. Insourcing is often regarded as the âdefaultâ or âdo-nothingâ scenario. In contrast, this paper explores insourcing as a conscious strategy requiring ongoing management to deliver successful business outcomes. This paper presents a single exploratory case study of insourcing at Crown Limited, an Australian-based international gaming company. It contributes to the literature on insourcing by identifying how Crown has oriented its IT function and processes to drive value from insourcing. This research suggests that insourcing is not about just replicating the practices of external suppliers at less cost. Rather, organisations that choose the insourcing path have alternate sources of value creation, by building on their close proximity to the business to drive innovation and new product growth, and the ability to match IT and business risk to control costs
Through What Mechanisms Does Business Analytics Contribute To Business Value?
This paper synthesizes from the literature a model of factors affecting organizational benefits from business analytics, then reports a preliminary test of that model. The model consists of two parts: a process model and a variance model. The process model depicts the analyse-insight-decision-action process through which an organizationâs business-analytic capabilities (high-quality data, integrated BA platform, and analytic people) create business value. The variance model proposes that the five factors in Davenport et al.âs (2010) DELTA model of BA success factors, plus three from Seddon et al.âs (2010) model of factors affecting organizational benefits from enterprise systems, assist a firm to embed evidence-based decision making in the organization, and so contribute to business value. A preliminary test of the model was conducted using data from 40 customer-success stories from IBM, SAP and Teradata websites. Our conclusion was that the model is likely to be a useful basis for future research
The Importance of Ongoing ERP Training and Support
This paper formulates and tests a model of the factors influencing organisational capacity to use an ERP system effectively in the years after go-live. Three large organisationsâ post-implementation studies into end-user training were used as preliminary validation of this model; and to highlight the proposition that usersâ ERP knowledge and skills will degrade in the absence of a systematic approach to ongoing training and support. The analysis also found that the negative effects of staff attrition and turnover offset the positive initiatives to enhance end-user competence in the most proactive organisation studied
Evidence for polarised boron in Co-B and Fe-B alloys
By exploiting the tunability of synchrotron radiation in measurements of spin-resolved photoemission it has proved possible to obtain information on the polarisation of the valence electrons of Co-B and Fe-B amorphous magnetic alloys, Both the spin-integrated and spin-resolved energy distribution curves show a marked dependence on photon energy indicating that the p states of boron hybridise with the d states of the transition metals giving rise to mixed states in the binding energy range 1 to 5 eV, The observed polarisation and spin-resolved densities of states imply that in the above restricted energy range there is a net negative polarisation of the boron states
Generation of Busulfan Chimeric Mice for the Analysis of T Cell Population Dynamics
This protocol was developed to generate chimeric mice in which T lymphocytes could be
stratified by age on the basis of congenic marker expression. The conditioning drug busulfan is used to
ablate host haematopoietic stem cells while leaving the peripheral immune system intact. Busulfan
treatment is followed by bone marrow transplantation (BMT), with T-cell depleted donor bone marrow
bearing a different congenic marker (CD45.2) to that of the host mouse (CD45.1). New cell production
post-BMT can thus be tracked by measuring the fraction of CD45.2^{+} cells over time within a population
of interest (Hogan et al., 2015; Gossel et al., 2017)
Going Beyond Operations with Enterprise Systems
Enterprise Systems have become the preferred type of IT systems in most large organizations in the last few decades. These, large-scale, integrated, packaged software suites have been shown to enable operational efficiency by several prior studies .This paper reviews a number of such studies and identifies a gap in the literature. The primary contribution of this paper is that it proposes that Enterprise Systems can create business value, in addition to operational efficiency, by achieving innovation (in product, process and alliance) and enabling better strategic decision making in the adopting firms. The paper also provides empirical evidence using detailed secondary data that supports this proposition. In addition, this study also provides additional evidence for concepts identified in earlier research. This paper reports on the first study of a research-in-progress and this model will be tested further through extensive primary case studie
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