Scandinavian Journal of Information Systems
Diversity in information systems action research methods
European Journal of Information Systems
Reflective systems development
Scandinavian Journal of Information Systems
Genre taxonomy: A knowledge repository of communicative actions
ACM Transactions on Information Systems (TOIS)
Understanding Computers and Cognition: A New Foundation for Design
Understanding Computers and Cognition: A New Foundation for Design
Conventions and Commitments in Distributed CSCW Groups
Computer Supported Cooperative Work
Choosing Between Competing Design Ideals in Information Systems Development
Information Systems Frontiers
Genres in Action: Negotiating Genres in Practice
HICSS '99 Proceedings of the Thirty-Second Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences-Volume 2 - Volume 2
A critical approach to evaluation
European Journal of Information Systems
DISCOURSIUM for cooperative examination of information in the context of the pragmatic web
ICPW '07 Proceedings of the 2nd international conference on Pragmatic web
Discourses on information ethics: The claim to universality
Ethics and Information Technology
Metacommunication Patterns in Online Communities
OCSC '09 Proceedings of the 3d International Conference on Online Communities and Social Computing: Held as Part of HCI International 2009
Electronic Commerce Research and Applications
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The concept of genre represents a meaningful pattern of communication, which has been applied in the information systems field. Genres are socially constructed: they may consequently be socially more or less acceptable or contested. This paper focuses on the concept of communicative genre and addresses the issue of how meta-communication processes guided by discursive-ethical principles can promote a rational and legitimate definition, design and structuring of genres. Such a meta-communication process has not yet been thoroughly discussed in relation to the concept of genre as a means for structuring (organizational) communication. This paper claims to make the following contributions: firstly, it provides a wider spectrum of discursive concepts for critically reflecting on and discursive evaluation of the content and structures of genres and genre instances. Secondly, it demonstrates how different kinds of meta-communications (ex ante, in-action, and ex post) can be used to legitimate genres in a manner compatible with the discourse ethics. It illustrates the discourse-ethical viewpoint concerning the legitimacy of genre structuring processes and thus, also, the legitimacy of resultant norms and contents of communication, especially in global contexts.