Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
555781 The Journal of Strategic Information Systems 2011 17 Pages PDF
Abstract

Green IT (information technology) has recently emerged into an active research area in the information systems (IS) discipline. A major gap that exists in the Green IT research literature today is the absence of a theoretical framework that can be used to assist organizations in assessing their potential for undertaking Green IT initiatives and implementing them via modern technological means such as virtualization. This study attempts to bridge this gap by developing and proposing an integrative framework which focuses on identifying and examining the factors that contribute to the assessment of a firm’s readiness to go green via IT-enabled virtualization. The framework is firmly grounded using three well-established IS theories: (a) technology-organization-environment, (b) process-virtualization, and (c) diffusion of innovation. It integrates these three theoretical lenses to utilize the strengths of each for assessing the potential for undertaking Green IT initiatives and the stages of Green IT implementation at the organizational level. The implications of the outcome of this study, both for the IS researchers and for the practicing managers are discussed. The plan for empirical testing and validation of our propositions is presented, as well as suggestions for future extensions of this study.

Research highlights► We develop framework to assess a firm’s readiness to go green via virtualization. ► Virtualization drives the integration of sustainability and business and IT practice. ► Virtualization can respond to the requirement for “Reduce, Reuse, Recycle”.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Information Systems
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