Essential Reading Material
All students are expected to read the papers in 1. and 4. The paper in 2. and 3. will be distributed among the participating students.
Tuesday, October 13 | Paper | Session |
1. Foundations | 1. Buterin (2014) 2. Böhme et al. (2015) 3. Nakamoto (2008) 4. Rossi et al. (2019) | Mandatory reading for all participants |
Wednesday, October 14 | | |
2.1 Blockchain Economics | 5. Biais et al. (2019) 6. Catalini & Gans (2016) 7. Cong & He (2019) 8. Chiu & Koeppl (2019) 9. Chong et al. (2019) 10. Davidson et al. (2018) 11. Foley et al. (2019) 12. Gandal & Halaburda (2016) 13. Li & Wang (2017) 14. Mai et al. (2018) | Paper presentation and discussion, as well as preparation of a one page “management summary” by assigned participants (15 to 18 minutes each) |
2.2 Blockchain Governance | 15. Andersen & Ingram (2019) 16. Bano et al. (2017) 17. Beck et al. (2018, pp. 1-29) 18. Bonneau (2018) 19. Cong et al. (2017) 20. DuPont (2018) 21. Du et al. (2019) 22. Miscione et al. (2019) 23. Saleh (2018) 24. Yin et al. (2019) | Paper presentation and discussion, as well as preparation of a one page “management summary” by assigned participants (15 to 18 minutes each) |
Thursday, October 15 | | |
3. Blockchain and Design | 25. Chanson et al. (2019) 26. Nærland et al. (2017) 27. Notheisen et al. (2017) | Paper presentation and discussion, as well as preparation of a one page “management summary” by assigned participants (15 to 18 minutes each) |
4. Ethereum DApp Development | 28. Antonopoulos and Wood (2018) Mastering Ethereum: Building Smart Contracts and DApps | The book will be used as foundation for the exercise and is a recommended reading for all participants. |
Friday, October 16 | | |
5. Paper Development Workshop | 29 Beck et al. (2018, pp. 29-35) 30. Constantinides et al. (2018, pp. 10-11) 31. Risius & Spohrer (2017) | Mandatory reading for all participants |
To prepare
Participants will have to prepare the material assigned to them before the course takes place (see 6.2). The paper in 2. and 3. will be assigned among the participating students who will prepare a brief presentation based on the paper as well as literature they are supposed to identify. The brief presentation should be power point slides that have to be sent to the organisers before the course takes place.
Assignments
Assignments to present papers will be made before the course takes place.
References
Andersen, J. V., & Bogusz, C. I. (2019). Self-Organizing in Blockchain Infrastructures: Generativity Through Shifting Objectives and Forking. Journal of the Association for Information Systems, 20(9), 11.
Antonopoulos, A. M.; & Wood G. (2018). Mastering Ethereum: Building Smart Contracts and DApps, O'Reilly Media.
Bano S., A. Sonnino, M. Al-Bassam, S. Azouvi, P. McCorry, S. Meiklejohn, G. Danezis (2017) Consensus in the age of blockchains. Working Paper, University College London and The Alan Turing Institute, London.
Beck R., C. Müller-Bloch, J.L. King (2018) Governance in the blockchain economy: A framework and research agenda. J. Assoc. Inform. Syst. Forthcoming.
Biais, B., Bisiere, C., Bouvard, M., & Casamatta, C. (2019). The blockchain folk theorem. The Review of Financial Studies, 32(5), 1662-1715.
Böhme R., N. Christin, B. Edelman, T. Moore (2015) Bitcoin: Economics, technology, and governance. J. Econ. Perspect. 29(2):213-238.
Bonneau J. (2018) Hostile blockchain takeovers. Proc. 5th Workshop Bitcoin Blockchain Res. (Bitcoin’18), Curaçao.
Buterin, V. (2014). Ethereum White Paper. Retrieved May 25, 2017, from http://www.the-blockchain.com/docs/Ethereum_white_paper-a_next_generation_smart_contract_and_decentralized_application_platform-vitalik-buterin.pdf
Catalini C., J.S. Gans (2016) Some simple economics of the blockchain. Working paper, National Bureau of Economic Research, Cambridge: MA.
Chanson, Mathieu; Bogner, Andreas; Bilgeri, Dominik; Fleisch, Elgar; and Wortmann, Felix (2019) "Blockchain for the IoT: Privacy-Preserving Protection of Sensor Data," Journal of the Association for Information Systems, 20(9), 10.
Chiu, J., & Koeppl, T. V. (2019). Blockchain-based settlement for asset trading. The Review of Financial Studies, 32(5), 1716-1753.
Chong, Alain Yee Loong; Lim, Eric T. K.; Hua, Xiuping; Zheng, Shuning; and Tan, Chee-Wee (2019) "Business on Chain: A Comparative Case Study of Five Blockchain-Inspired Business Models," Journal of the Association for Information Systems, 20(9), 9.
Cong, L. W., & He, Z. (2019). Blockchain disruption and smart contracts. The Review of Financial Studies, 32(5), 1754-1797.
Cong L.W., Z. He, J. Li (2017) Decentralized mining in centralized pools. Working paper, University of Chicago, Chicago: IL.
Constantinides P., O. Henfridsson, G.G. Parker (2018) Introduction: Platforms and infrastructures in the digital age. Inform. Syst. Res. 29(2):381-400.
Davidson S., P. De Filippi, J. Potts (2018) Blockchains and the economic institutions of capitalism. J. Institu. Econom., ePub ahead of print January 18.
Du, W. D., Pan, S. L., Leidner, D. E., & Ying, W. (2019). Affordances, experimentation and actualization of FinTech: A blockchain implementation study. The Journal of Strategic Information Systems, 28(1), 50-65.
DuPont Q .(2018) Experiments in algorithmic governance: A history and ethnography of ‘The DAO,’ a failed decentralized autonomous organization. M. Campbell-Verduyn, ed. Bitcoin and Beyond: Cryptocurrencies, Blockchains, and Global Governance, Routledge, Abingdon, UK, 157-177.
Foley, S., Karlsen, J. R., & PutniĆš, T. J. (2019). Sex, drugs, and bitcoin: How much illegal activity is financed through cryptocurrencies?. The Review of Financial Studies, 32(5), 1798-1853.
Gandal, N., and Halaburda, H. 2016. “Can we predict the winner in a market with network effects? Competition in cryptocurrency market,” Games (7:3), pp. 1-21.
Gregor, S., & Jones, D. (2007). The anatomy of a design theory. Journal of the Association for Information systems, 8(5).
Li X., C.A. Wang (2017) The technology and economic determinants of cryptocurrency exchange rates: The case of Bitcoin. Decision Support Syst. 95:49-60.
Mai F., Z. Shan, Q. Bai, X. Wang, R.H. Chiang (2018) How does social media impact Bitcoin value? A test of the silent majority hypothesis. J. Management Inform. Syst. 35(1):19-52.
Miscione, G., Goerke, T., Klein, S., Schwabe, G., & Ziolkowski, R. (2019). Hanseatic Governance: Understanding Blockchain as Organizational Technology. ICIS 2019 Proceedings.
Nakamoto S. (2008) Bitcoin: A Peer-to-Peer Electronic Cash System. White paper, available at https://bitcoin.org/bitcoin.pdf.
Nærland, K., Müller-Bloch, C., Beck, R., & Palmund, S. (2017). Blockchain to Rule the Waves – Nascent Design Principles for Reducing Risk and Uncertainty in Decentralized Environments. 38th International Conference on Information Systems (ICIS 2017). Seoul, South Korea.
Notheisen, B., Cholewa, J. B., & Shanmugam, A. P. (2017). Trading Real-World Assets on Blockchain. Business & Information Systems Engineering, 59(6), 425-440.
Risius M., K. Spohrer (2017) A blockchain research framework. Bus. Inform. Syst. Engrg. 59(6):385–409.
Rossi, M., Mueller-Bloch, C., Thatcher, J. B., & Beck, R. (2019). Blockchain Research in Information Systems: Current Trends and an Inclusive Future Research Agenda. Journal of the Association for Information Systems, 20(9), 14.
Saleh F. (2018) Blockchain without waste: Proof-of-stake. Working paper, New York University, New York.
Yin, H. H. Y., Langenheldt, K., Harlev, M., Mukkamala, R. R., & Vatrapu, R. (2019). Regulating cryptocurrencies: a supervised machine learning approach to de-anonymizing the bitcoin blockchain. Journal of Management Information Systems, 36(1), 37-73.