• DocumentCode
    801138
  • Title

    Information assets in interorganizational governance: exploring the property rights perspective

  • Author

    Wareham, Jonathan D.

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Comput. Inf. Syst., Georgia State Univ., Atlanta, GA, USA
  • Volume
    50
  • Issue
    3
  • fYear
    2003
  • Firstpage
    337
  • Lastpage
    351
  • Abstract
    Empirical research in interorganizational governance has been motivated primarily by transaction cost economics (TCE) and its focus on proprietary electronic linkages, asset specific investments, and consequent holdup problems. Where many early interorganizational systems were characterized by nonredeployable assets, recent instances are distinguished by open standards and a higher degree of redeployable technology. Hence, interorganizational research has reached out to alternative theories that embrace social and procedural interdependence in addition to technological links. The principal theoretical alternative to TCE that addresses social interdependence is social networking theory. Where both TCE and networking have relative merits as explanatory frameworks, they are antithetical in their purest forms and most often mutually exclusive in application. However, both perspectives confront analytical boundaries that may be overcome through answers and dimensions provided by the other. Hence, a synthesis between these competing theoretical viewpoints is sought. The property rights perspective of information, one that retains TCE´s predictive ability and networking´s contextual focus, is introduced and critically evaluated as an alternative framework that may enable such a synthesis. A positive case study is analyzed which explores the theory´s utility in illuminating interorganizational systems with disaggregate physical and information assets, technical, procedural, and social interdependence. The case concludes with a critical evaluation of the perspective´s merits as a positive explanatory framework of interorganizational governance, finding that the predictive utility is greatest where information is inalienable and opportunism is high.
  • Keywords
    economics; electronic commerce; industrial property; information technology; asset specific investments; business to business commerce; consequent holdup problems; disaggregate physical assets; early interorganizational systems; explanatory frameworks; information assets; information sharing; interorganizational governance; interorganizational systems; networking theory; nonredeployable assets; open standards; positive explanatory framework; procedural interdependence; property rights perspective; proprietary electronic linkages; redeployable technology; social interdependence; social networking theory; technological links; transaction cost economics; Business; Consumer electronics; Costs; Couplings; Economic forecasting; Helium; Information analysis; Investments; Network synthesis; Social network services;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Engineering Management, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0018-9391
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TEM.2003.817291
  • Filename
    1236008