Carmen Leong

Associate Professor

School of Information Systems and Technology Management - PhD (Information Systems), National University of Singapore | Master in Computing (Information Technology Project Management), National University of Singapore | B.S. (Computer), University of Technology Malaysia

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Carmen's research interests include digitally enabled strategic transformation in organisations and digital empowerment in social studies. In the past few years, she has conducted case study research in China, Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand and Germany. She has published in premier IS journals including MIS Quarterly, Journal of Association Information Systems, European Journal of Information Systems and in premier IS conference papers (ICIS, ECIS). She received her PhD degree from The National University of Singapore. Prior to entering academia, she worked in the private and public sectors in Singapore and Malaysia. She was also the recipient of NUS President's Graduate Fellowship and was listed in the Top 200 Scholars 2015-2017 AIS Research Ranking

From This Author

How digital nomads impact local communities: A Chiang Mai case study

Digital nomads can be catalysts for economic and cultural change. New research examines their impact on Chiang Mai and the implications for other cities

Digital activism: how social media fuelled the Bersih movement

While social media played a key role in empowering the masses in Malaysia's Bersih movement, it still took some form of organisation and formalisation to sustain the global social movement

How is FinTech helping digital entrepreneurs in developing communities?

FinTech is playing an important role in helping digital entrepreneurs tap into growth opportunities in Indonesia's developing communities, according to UNSW Business School research

Mass surveillance, privacy & security: what can Australia learn from China?

As the Government's identity-matching Bill is redrafted, there are a number of lessons Australia can learn from China when it comes to surveillance technology

Is the effectiveness of social media overrated?

Feeling empowered is not the same as being empowered

Lending a hand: How social media is energising crisis response

When disaster strikes, communities are sharing information and offering support

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