Author List: Chua, Cecil Eng Huang; Wareham, Jonathan; Robey, Daniel;
MIS Quarterly, 2007, Volume 31, Issue 4, Page 759-781.
Internet auctions demonstrate that advances in information technologies can create more efficient venues of exchange between large numbers of traders. However, the growth of Internet auctions has been accompanied by a corresponding growth in Internet auction fraud. Much extant research on Internet auction fraud in the information systems literature is conducted at the individual level of analysis, thereby limiting its focus to the choices of individual traders or trading dyads. The criminology literature, in contrast, recognizes that social and community factors are equally important influences on the perpetration and prevention of crime. We employ social disorganization theory as a lens to explain how online auction communities address auction fraud and how those communities interact with formal authorities. We show how communities may defy, coexist, or cooperate with the formal authority of auction houses. These observations are supported by a qualitative analysis of three cases of online anticrime communities operating in different auction product categories. Our analysis extends aspects of social disorganization theory to online communities. We conclude that community-based clan control may operate in concert with authority-based formal control to manage the problem of Internet auction fraud more effectively.
Keywords: Auction fraud; e-commerce; authority; communities; clan control; informal social control
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#228 0.146 internet peer used access web influence traditional fraud world ecology services impact cases wide home studies addition choice 2008 telephone
#45 0.143 community communities online members participants wikipedia social member knowledge content discussion collaboration attachment communication law virtual membership structures forms activities
#91 0.111 auctions auction bidding bidders bid combinatorial bids online bidder strategies sequential prices design price using outcomes behavior theoretical computational efficiency
#280 0.109 control controls formal systems mechanisms modes clan informal used internal literature outsourced outcome theory configuration attempts evolution authority complementary little
#223 0.081 insurance companies growth portfolios intensity company life portfolio industry newly vulnerable terms composition operating implemented factors asset focus disaggregation choices
#292 0.076 information research literature systems framework review paper theoretical based potential future implications practice discussed current concept propositions findings provided extant
#30 0.069 market trading markets exchange traders trade transaction financial orders securities significant established number exchanges regulatory structures order traditional stock provides