Aim

The overall aim of the PhD colloquium is to connect PhD students to the e-government research community. During the colloquium, you will meet other PhD students, young researchers who have just finished their PhDs, and more experienced scholars. The colloquium will host 6-8 students and 6-8 faculty members. The initial e-government network of students and faculty that the colloquium provides will serve you well during the main conference – and hopefully in the years to come. The colloquium aims to establish a nice and comfortable environment, where you will feel welcome and be free to not only present and receive feedback on your research, but also address a wider range of questions concerning your PhD experience overall. Apart from offering feedback on your research question, related work, theory, methods and results, the colloquium also aims to stimulate reflections on your motivation, research perspective and future implications of your work on practice and research.

Participation Method

The PhD colloquium will be highly interactive. You will not present your own research, contrary to what is normal at most research conferences. Another PhD student will present your paper and students will have prepared questions for the presentation of your work. In this way, you will learn how your written work is perceived by others and hopefully, you will see your work from new perspectives – or, where it needs to be clarified. Furthermore, at least one faculty member will be especially appointed to comment on your paper. This presentation format ensures a high level of engagement among students and faculty. The colloquium will furthermore include a social dinner, which is free of charge for participants.

Target Audience

We welcome all PhD students within the wider field of information and communication technologies in the public sector. Ideally, student participants will have completed one or two years of doctoral study or progressed far enough in their research to have a structured proposal idea and preliminary findings, but have not reached the stage of defending their dissertations. We expect that students at this stage of study will gain the most value from feedback on their work.

Requirements for submissions

a) a research paper that describes your research,
b) a short CV,
c) a personal statement,
d) proof of enrollment in a PhD Program, and
e) a request for travel expense-related stipends (optional)

The research paper should follow the EGOV-CeDEM-ePart ongoing research paper template, be single-authored and not exceed 8 pages in total. The CV and personal statement should not exceed two pages. There is no formal format for b and c. The five documents must be merged into one PDF file in the order a, b, c, d, e, before uploading it to the conference management system.

a) The paper content follows a generic thesis template, including abstract, keywords, introduction with a research question, related work, theory, methodology, and preliminary results. To make this colloquium most beneficial for the remaining work on your PhD, we want you to extend your methodology and results sections. In the methodology section, we ask you to elaborate on your motivation, perspective, philosophy, research design, data collection techniques, and analytical framework. In the results section, we ask you to present your preliminary results but furthermore, elaborate on the future impact of your results on practice (for instance recommendations for public sector practitioners) and on research (for instance disclosure of needs for new research areas). We recommend allocating 4 pages to abstract, keywords, introduction, related work and theory and 4 pages to methodology and preliminary results.

b) A brief personal CV of your prior education, work experiences, personal interests, leisure time activities, family status etc. The CV is aimed to facilitate curiosity and informal contact with other colloquium participants.

c) The personal statement (approx. 1 page) should include your research motivation, your personal stances related to your research and the future achievements that you hope to realize, whether it’s within research, teaching, industry, an NGO, etc. This could also include your future visions of global work. Furthermore, your statement should include 2-3 specific questions that you want the colloquium participants to focus on during the presentation of your research.

d) The request for travel expense-related stipends should include a letter of motivation explaining why you need a stipend and what costs need to be covered, for instance, expenses with hotel and approximate flight costs (up to €1000 – for applicants outside Europe and €500 for applicants in Europe).

Submitting

The submission is done through the main conference website in the Easy Chair conference management system. Your submission will be reviewed by the chairs of the doctoral colloquium and may have to be revised according to review comments before final acceptance. On acceptance, you will receive further instructions for preparing the camera-ready paper, for the PhD colloquium, and the draft program.
The accepted papers at the PhD Colloquium will not be published in the conference proceedings. If you would like that we recommended that in addition you submit a poster or an ongoing research to the main conference.

Admission and benefits

The PhD Colloquium chairs admit participants to the doctoral colloquium based on a submitted research proposal/contribution. Admitted doctoral students are required to make academic contributions to the doctoral colloquium (no sit-ins only). Admitted doctoral students are also required to make service contributions to the overall conference organization (typically in the amount of four hours per student, for example, for staffing the reception desk, taking pictures, or by helping with other aspects of the conference organization). Upon admission as a doctoral student to participate in the colloquium, the conference organization will in return:

  • Waive the conference registration fee (exception: the registration fee will not be waived, if an admitted doctoral student is the author or co-author of a full research paper accepted for the conference proceedings)
  • Fully cover the expenses for attending the colloquium dinner
  • Fully cover the expenses for attending the conference dinner

Important Dates

  • PhD Colloquium deadline for submissions: 15 May 2019
  • PhD Colloquium notification of acceptance: 15 June 2019
  • PhD Colloquium revised version: 15 July 2019
  • PhD Colloquium: 1 September 2019
  • Conference: 2-4 September 2019

Colloquium Organizers and Members

Chairs

  • Gabriela Viale Pereira, Danube University Krems, Austria (lead) (email: gabriela.viale-pereira@donau-uni.ac.at)
  • J. Ramon Gil-Garcia, University at Albany, SUNY, USA (email: jgil-garcia@ctg.albany.edu)
  • Ida Lindgren, Linköping University, Sweden (email: ida.lindgren@liu.se)
  • Anneke Zuiderwijk, Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands (email: a.m.g.zuiderwijk-vaneijk@tudelft.nl)
  • Evangelos Kalampokis, University of Macedonia, Greece (email: ekal@uom.edu.gr)

Further Senior Faculty PhD Colloquium Members

  • Marijn Janssen, TU Delft, The Netherlands
  • Hans Jochen Scholl, University of Washington, USA
  • Themis Tambouris, University of Macedonia, Greece
  • Peter Parycek, Danube University Krems, Austria
  • Barbara Re, University of Camerino, Italy
  • Andrea Polini, University of Camerino, Italy