| CRITO is proud to announce that on December
15, 2008, Dr. Kenneth L. Kraemer was presented the Association
for Information Systems LEO Award for Exceptional Lifetime
Achievement in Information Systems at the annual International
Conference on Information Studies in Paris, France.
In 1999, the LEO award was established by Council of the Association
for Information Systems and the Executive Committee of the
International Conference on Information Systems in order to
honor prominent individuals in the Information Systems discipline.
It is named after The Lyons Electronic Office, one of the
world’s first commercial applications of computing. The LEO
award is only given to one, if not any, scholar or practitioner,
per year, who has made exceptional contributions throughout
their career for the field. A LEO award recipient is an individual
highly esteemed for their professional and personal integrity,
representative of their national or regional Information Systems
community, and is a role model and inspiration to fellow colleagues
and students. A LEO award honoree not only excels in their
field of study, but can also command attention from contributions
made in fields other than Information Systems.
As this year’s award recipient, Ken Kraemer is truly an outstanding
individual in the area of Information Systems and has made
significant global contributions to the field over the past
40 years. He has been on faculty of The Paul Merage School
of Business and The Donald Bren School of Information and
Computer Science at UCI. He held the Taco Bell chair in IT
for Management at UCI and the Shaw Chair in Information Systems
at the National University of Singapore (1990-91). He was
the founding Director of the Center for Research on Information
Technology and Organizations (CRITO), the CRITO Consortium--an
NSF Industry-University Cooperative Research Center at UCI,
and the Personal Computing Industry Center (PCIC)--a Sloan
Foundation Industry Center for study of the personal computing
industry and technical innovation.
Dr. Kraemer is internationally known as one of the principal
founders and intellectual architects of the “Irvine School”
of social analysis of information technology (IT). In 1974,
as Director of the Public Policy Research Organization, he
and his colleagues at UCI initiated a program of research
into the social, political, economic, and policy impacts of
IT that has become a model for research into the societal
implications of information and communications technologies
worldwide. It is recognized in scholarly and practitioner
communities for its critical stance towards computerization,
its use of multiple theoretical perspectives, its naturalistic
research strategy, and its emphasis on history and change
over time in the study of IT. Beginning in the 1970’s, Dr.
Kraemer's was among the first to give attention to the political
character of information systems in organizations and the
political uses of computer models in policy making in studies
of federal and local governments in the U.S. and internationally.
In the 1980s and 1990’s he examined the effects of national
policies on computer production and use in the U.S., and later
in Asia-Pacific and Latin American countries in efforts to
understand the keys to national competitiveness in the information
technology industry. He also examined both the determinants
of IT investments and the contributions of IT investments
to national productivity and economic growth in developed
and developing countries worldwide. He completed a ten-country
study of e-commerce diffusion in 2006. His current research
is focused on the globalization of knowledge work in the electronics
industry and on which companies and countries capture the
profits, jobs and wages from innovations such as iPods or
notebook computers in global value chains.
In addition, Dr. Kraemer has received 15 important honors
and awards, including being elected Fellow of AIS in 2003.
He has published 23 books and has published over 175 articles
in leading journals of information systems and public policy.
Currently, his citation count of 3,580 places him among the
very top academics in management.
Ken Kraemer received a Bachelor of Architecture degree from
the University of Notre Dame in 1959, reached the rank of
Captain in the U.S. Air Force, and attended the University
of Southern California as a Lasker Fellow receiving a masters
degree in City and Regional Planning (1964) and as an NDEA
Fellow receiving masters (1965) and Ph.D. degrees in public
policy and management (1967).
Please join us in congratulating Dr. Kraemer on this distinguished
award.
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