The State of Globalization of the Information Systems Discipline: A Historical Analysis
Tobias Mettler
This study explores the degree of globalization within the Information Systems (IS) academic discipline by analyzing research collaboration patterns over four decades. Using historical and geospatial network analysis of bibliometric data from 1979 to 2021, the research assesses the geographical evolution of collaborations within the field. The study replicates and extends a previous analysis from 2003 to determine if the IS community has become more globalized or has remained localized.
Problem
Global challenges require global scientific collaboration, yet there is a growing political trend towards localization and national focus, creating a tension for academic fields like Information Systems. There has been limited systematic research on the geographical patterns of collaboration in IS for the past two decades. This study addresses this gap by investigating whether the IS discipline has evolved into a more international community or has maintained a localized, parochial character in the face of de-globalization trends and geopolitical shifts.
Outcome
- The Information Systems (IS) discipline has become significantly more international since 2003, transitioning from a localized 'germinal phase' to one with broader global participation. - International collaboration has steadily increased, with internationally co-authored papers rising from 7.9% in 1979-1983 to 47.5% in 2010-2021. - Despite this growth, the trend toward global (inter-continental) collaboration has been slower and appears to have plateaued around 2015. - Research activity remains concentrated in economically affluent nations, with regions like South America, Africa, and parts of Asia still underrepresented in the global academic discourse. - The discipline is now less 'parochial' but cannot yet be considered a truly 'global research discipline' due to these persistent geographical imbalances.
Host: Welcome to A.I.S. Insights — powered by Living Knowledge. In a world that is both increasingly connected and politically fractured, how global are the ideas that shape our technology and businesses? Today, we're diving into a fascinating study that asks that very question of its own field.
Host: The study is titled "The State of Globalization of the Information Systems Discipline: A Historical Analysis." It explores how research collaboration in the world of Information Systems, or IS, has evolved geographically over the last four decades to see if the community has become truly global, or if it has remained in local bubbles.
Host: With me is our expert analyst, Alex Ian Sutherland. Alex, welcome.
Expert: Great to be here, Anna.
Host: So, let's start with the big picture. Why is it so important to understand collaboration patterns in an academic field? What’s the real-world problem here?
Expert: The problem is a fundamental tension. On one hand, global challenges, from supply chain disruptions to climate change, require global scientific collaboration. Information Systems are at the heart of solving these. But on the other hand, we're seeing a political trend towards localization and national focus. There was a real risk that the IS field, which studies global networks, might itself be stuck in regional echo chambers.
Host: So, we're checking if the experts are practicing what they preach, in a sense.
Expert: Exactly. For nearly twenty years, there was no systematic research into this. This study fills that gap by asking: has the IS discipline evolved into an international community, or has it maintained a localized, what the study calls 'parochial', character in the face of these de-globalization trends?
Host: It sounds like a massive question. How did the researchers even begin to answer that?
Expert: It was a huge undertaking. They performed a historical and geospatial network analysis. In simple terms, they gathered publication data from the top IS journals over 42 years, from 1979 to 2021. That's over 6,400 articles. They then mapped the home institutions of every single author to see who was working with whom, and where they were in the world. This allowed them to visualize the evolution of research networks across the globe over time.
Host: An academic ancestry map, almost. So after charting four decades of collaboration, what did they find? Has the field become more global?
Expert: The findings are a classic good news, bad news story. The good news is that the discipline has become significantly more international. The study shows that internationally co-authored papers skyrocketed from just under 8% in the early 80s to nearly 48% in the last decade. The field has definitely broken out of its initial, very localized phase.
Host: That sounds like a huge success for global collaboration. Where's the bad news?
Expert: The bad news has two parts. First, while international collaboration grew, truly global, inter-continental collaboration grew much more slowly. More worryingly, that trend appears to have stalled and plateaued around 2015. The forces of de-globalization may actually be showing up in the data.
Host: A plateau is concerning. And what was the second part of the bad news?
Expert: It's about who is—and who isn't—part of the conversation. The study’s maps clearly show that research activity is still heavily concentrated in economically affluent nations in North America, Europe, and parts of Asia. There are vast regions, particularly in South America, Africa, and other parts of Asia, that are still hugely underrepresented. So, the discipline is less parochial, but it can't be called a truly 'global research discipline' yet.
Host: This is where it gets critical for our audience. Alex, why should a business leader or a tech strategist care about these academic patterns? What are the key business takeaways?
Expert: There are three big ones. First is the risk of an intellectual echo chamber. If the research that underpins digital transformation, AI ethics, or new business models comes from just a few cultural and economic contexts, the solutions won't work everywhere. A business expanding into new global markets needs diverse insights, not just a North American or European perspective.
Host: That makes sense. A one-size-fits-all solution rarely fits anyone perfectly. What’s the second takeaway?
Expert: It’s about talent and innovation. The study's maps essentially show the world’s innovation hotspots for information systems. For businesses, this is a guide to where the next wave of talent and cutting-edge ideas will come from. But it also highlights a massive missed opportunity: the untapped intellectual capital in all those underrepresented regions. Smart companies should be asking how they can engage with those areas.
Host: And the third takeaway?
Expert: Geopolitical risk in the knowledge supply chain. The plateau in global collaboration around 2015 is a major warning flare. Businesses depend on the global flow of ideas. If academic partnerships become fragmented along geopolitical lines, the global knowledge pool shrinks. This can create strategic blind spots for companies trying to anticipate the next big technological shift.
Host: So to recap, the world of Information Systems research has become much more international, connecting different countries more than ever before.
Host: However, true global, inter-continental collaboration is stalling, and the research landscape is still dominated by a few affluent regions, leaving much of the world out.
Host: For business, this is a call to action: to be wary of strategic blind spots from this research echo chamber, to look for talent in new places, and to understand that geopolitics can directly impact the innovation pipeline.
Host: Alex, thank you so much for breaking this down for us. These are powerful insights.
Expert: My pleasure, Anna.
Host: And thank you for listening to A.I.S. Insights — powered by Living Knowledge. Join us next time as we decode the research that’s shaping our world.
Globalization of Research, Information Systems Discipline, Historical Analysis, De-globalization, Localization of Research, Research Collaboration, Bibliometrics