Integration of association rules and ontologies for semantic query expansion
Data & Knowledge Engineering
Harnessing Green IT: Principles and Practices
IT Professional
Legal and Policy Environments: An Institutional Perspective of Global E-Commerce Adoption
HICSS '09 Proceedings of the 42nd Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences
Small-firm computing: motivators and inhibitors
MIS Quarterly
Information Systems Frontiers
Hi-index | 0.00 |
New Zealand is a small country and most of its businesses are small with 96 % of all enterprises employing fewer than 20 people. New Zealand takes pride in its "clean green" image, however small and medium sized businesses (SMEs) have limited resources, low awareness of the environmental impacts of the technologies they use, and perceive relatively few imperatives for changing their practices. In this paper we use institutional theory to frame a study of the factors which influence SMEs to adopt Green IS/IT practices. We found a diversity of viewpoints that suggest that adopting a one size fits all approach around encouraging organizations to adopt Green IS/IT is unlikely to be successful. However, it is doubtful that leadership in this area will arise in the small business sector, and coercive pressure from Government or other regulatory bodies is likely to be required. Market-place imperatives from customers and large players in supply chains can also be significant. Institutional theory was further used to understand the relative importance of these different pressures. These findings have relevance in other contexts as SMEs are the dominant form of business in many countries around the world and SMEs are estimated to have a combined contribution of around 70 % in terms of global pollution.