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Information Systems Journal, Volume 6
Volume 6, Number 1, January 1996
- Brian Fitzgerald:

Formalized systems development methodologies: a critical perspective. 3-24 - David Graham Wastell:

The fetish of technique: methodology as a social defence. 25-40 - Arthur H. M. ter Hofstede, T. F. Verhoef:

Meta-CASE: Is the game worth the candle? 41-68 - Geoff Walsham:

Ethical theory, codes of ethics and IS practice. 69-81
Volume 6, Number 2, April 1996
- David E. Avison, Guy Fitzgerald:

Editorial. 83-84
- Mary C. Lacity, David F. Feeny:

In search of Europe's information technology leaders: review of methods and empirical evidence. 85-108 - Alison Savage, John Mingers:

A framework for linking Soft Systems Methodology (SSM) and Jackson System Development (JSD). 109-129 - Dan Remenyi, Brian Williams:

The nature of research: qualitative or quantitative, narrative or paradigmatic? 131-146 - Ron Weber, Yanchun Zhang:

An analytical evaluation of NIAM'S grammar for conceptual schema diagrams. 147-170
Volume 6, Number 3, July 1996
- David E. Avison, Guy Fitzgerald:

Editorial. 171-172
- Stephen F. King:

CASE tools and organizational action. 173-194 - Lars Mathiassen, Carsten Sørensen

:
The capability maturity model and CASE. 195-208 - Prodromos D. Chatzoglou, Linda A. Macaulay:

Requirements capture and IS methodologies. 209-225 - Angèle L. M. Cavaye:

Case study research: a multi-faceted research approach for IS. 227-242
Volume 6, Number 4, October 1996
- David E. Avison, Guy Fitzgerald:

Editorial. 243-244
- David Wastell:

Human-machine dynamics in complex information systems: the 'microworld' paradigm as a heuristic tool for developing theory and exploring design issues. 245-260 - M. Gordon Hunter, John E. Beck:

A cross-cultural comparison of 'excellent' systems analysts. 261-281 - Irene S. Y. Koh, Michael S. H. Heng:

Users and designers as partners - design method and tools for user participation and designer accountability within the design process. 283-300 - Marius A. Janson, Carson C. Woo:

A speech act lexicon: an alternative use of speech act theory in information systems. 301-329

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