A scientific methodology for MIS case studies
MIS Quarterly
The qualitative difference in information systems research and practice
Proceedings of the IFIP TC8 WG 8.2 international conference on Information systems and qualitative research
GIS for district-level administration in India: problems and opportunities
MIS Quarterly - Special issue on intensive research in information systems
A set of principles for conducting and evaluating interpretive field studies in information systems
MIS Quarterly - Special issue on intensive research in information systems
Understanding software operations support expertise: a revealed causal mapping approach
MIS Quarterly - Special issue on Intensive research in information systems: using qualitative, interpretive, and case methods to study information technology—third installment
Understanding GDSS in symbolic context: shifting the focus from technology to interaction
MIS Quarterly - Special issue on Intensive research in information systems: using qualitative, interpretive, and case methods to study information technology—third installment
Generalizing Generalizability in Information Systems Research
Information Systems Research
Design science in information systems research
MIS Quarterly
The nature of theory in information systems
MIS Quarterly
B2B integration in global supply chains: An identification of technical integration scenarios
The Journal of Strategic Information Systems
The Power of Patterns and Pattern Recognition When Developing Information-Based Strategy
Journal of Management Information Systems
Information and Organization
Problem solving representations in systems development
International Journal of Business Information Systems
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Qualitative research is just as able as quantitative research to follow certain fundamental principles of logic in general and scientific reasoning in particular. Two such principles are the logic of modus ponens and the logic of modus tollens. In this essay, we frame different research approaches- positivist research, interpretive research, action research, and design research-in the forms of modus ponens and modus tollens. Three issues emerge from this framing and call into question how research is now conducted in the discipline of information systems. They are the issue of a common scientific basis, the issue of the fallacy of affirming the consequent, and the issue of summative validity. Both rigor and relevance in information systems research may be better achieved by attending to the three issues.