Fwd: (SEWORLD) Call for Chapters: Open Source Software Development

Stephane Ducasse ducasse at iam.unibe.ch
Wed Nov 6 19:33:03 UTC 2002


Begin forwarded message:

> From: Stefan Koch <stefan.koch at wu-wien.ac.at>
> Date: Mer nov 6, 2002  3:24:03  pm Europe/Zurich
> To: SEWORLD at serl.cs.colorado.edu
> Subject: (SEWORLD) Call for Chapters: Open Source Software Development
>
>
> Call for Chapters:
> ================================
> OPEN SOURCE SOFTWARE DEVELOPMENT
> ================================
> A book edited by Stefan Koch and published by Idea Group, Inc.
>
> Submission Deadline: December 31, 2002
>
> Introduction
> ============
>
> Open source software development has generated increasing interest in 
> the
> last years, both in academic circles and the software industry. 
> Especially
> Linux, but also several other widely adopted projects like GNU 
> project's
> utilities and libraries, the Perl and Tcl programming languages, and 
> the
> Apache Web server have sparked the interest in the resulting products 
> and
> their special form of development.
>
> Overall Objective of the Book
> =============================
>
> This book aims at publishing original academic work on Open Source
> software development. This wide area entails many facets, including the
> special development process performed by a large number of 
> geographically
> dispersed programmers, community issues like coordination and
> communication, motivations of the participants, and also economic and 
> even
> legal issues. Regarding the development process, whose adherence to
> software engineering standards and guidelines is often debated, there 
> is
> still a scarcity of quantitative accounts on Open Source projects and
> communities. Especially the effort expended by all participants would 
> be
> of high interest as a basis for comparisons to the efficiency of
> commercial development practices. Also, a mixture between more
> 'traditional' approaches and the Open Source process have been 
> proposed as
> being of very high potential, but have not yet been thoroughly 
> explored.
>
> The ways in which the 'virtual teams' of Open Source development
> communities form, interact, communicate and coordinate also seem of
> particular interest. Several tools and technologies are in use to 
> support
> these activities, and studies of their usage and efficiency in 
> different
> projects are encouraged. In addition, psychological and social issues 
> like
> motivational aspects, political behaviour and analogies with academic
> research could be explored. Other questions include the economic 
> viability
> of the Open Source movement, business models, legal issues, its
> implications for the software industry for example regarding the
> implementation of open standards, and in special application areas like
> public administration or teaching.
>
> Possible Topics
> ===============
>
> Recommended Topics include (but are not limited to):
>
> * Case studies of Open Source projects, their participants and/or their
> development process
>
> * Communication and coordination in Open Source projects: 
> Organisational
> forms and tools/technologies used
>
> * Open Source software development processes
>
> * Adoption of software engineering practices in Open Source projects
> (during all phases of the life-cycle)
>
> * Software development processes as a mixture of traditional approaches
> and Open Source (e.g. 'gated open source communities')
>
> * Motivation of participants in Open Source projects
>
> * Hosting of Open Source projects
>
> * Business models for Open Source
>
> * Evolution of both Open Source software artefacts and the Open Source
> community overall
>
> * Legal issues of Open Source software
>
> * Implications of the Open Source movement for the software industry
>
> * Implications of the special attributes of Open Source software for 
> usage
> in functional areas like public administration or teaching
>
> * Usage and adoption of Open Source software in different application
> areas and/or countries
>
> * Adoption of Open Source principles in other areas than software
> development
>
> Submission Procedure
> ====================
>
> Researchers and practitioners are invited to submit a 2-5 page 
> manuscript
> proposal on or before December 31, 2002, clearly explaining the mission
> and concerns of the proposed chapter. Authors will be notified by 
> January
> 31, 2003 about the status of their proposals, and authors of accepted
> chapter will receive chapter organizational guidelines. Full chapters 
> are
> expected to be submitted by May 1, 2003.  All submitted chapters will 
> be
> reviewed by 2-3 reviewers on a double-blind basis. The book is 
> scheduled
> to be published by Idea Group, Inc., publisher of the "Idea Group
> Publishing", "Information Science Publishing" and "IRM Press" imprints 
> in
> 2004.
>
> Important Dates
> ===============
>
> Chapter proposals due: 	31.12. 2002
> Proposal acceptance notification: 31.1. 2003
> Full chapters due: 1.5. 2003
>
> World Wide Web
> ==============
>
> For this book project, a website has been established which will 
> provide
> the Call for Chapters, any new announcements and additional 
> information.
>
> http://wwwai.wu-wien.ac.at/~koch/oss-book/
>
> Contact Information
> ===================
>
> Please send all inquiries and submissions to the Editor:
>
> Stefan Koch
> Department of Information Business
> University of Economics and BA
> Augasse 2-6, 1090 Vienna, Austria
> Tel.: (+43-1) 31336/5206
> Fax: (+43-1) 31336/739
> e-Mail: stefan.koch at wu-wien.ac.at
> http://wwwai.wu-wien.ac.at/~koch/uni.html
>
>
> ============================================================
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> ============================================================
>
>
>
Dr. Stéphane DUCASSE (ducasse at iam.unibe.ch) 
http://www.iam.unibe.ch/~ducasse/
  "if you knew today was your last day on earth, what would you do
  different? ... especially if, by doing something different, today
  might not be your last day on earth" Calvin&Hobbes





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