- Key Research/Interest Areas:
- Business Value of Information Technology Investments
- Impact of Web 2.0 Technologies
- Electronic Markets
- Education:
- Ph.D., 1991, University of Rochester
- M.S., 1988, University of Rochester
- B.Tech., 1985, Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi, India
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Sanjeev Dewan is an associate professor in information systems at the The Paul Merage School of Business at the University of California, Irvine. Prior to joining UC Irvine in Fall 2001, he served on the faculties of the business schools at the University of Washington, Seattle, and George Mason University. He received his Ph.D. in Business Administration in 1991 from the Simon School at the University of Rochester, in the area of Information Systems. Previously, he received the B.Tech. degree in Mechanical Engineering from the Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi, India.
His current research interests are in the areas of the risk and return of IT investments, business value of Web 2.0 technologies, and electronic commerce. He is currently serving as a senior editor at Information Systems Research, associate editor at Management Science, track chair for ICIS 2008 in Paris and program co-chair for PACIS 2009 in Hyderabad, India. 
- Dewan, S., Ganley, D. and Kraemer, K.L., “Complementarities in the Diffusion of Personal Computers and the Internet: Implications for the Global Digital Divide,” forthcoming in Information Systems Research.
- Dewan, S., Shi, C. and Gurbaxani, V., “Investigating the Risk-Return Relationship of Information Technology Investment: Firm-Level Empirical Analysis,” Management Science, December 2007, Vol. 53, No. 12, pp. 1829-1842.
- Dewan, S. and Hsu, V., “Adverse Selection in Electronic Markets: Evidence from Online Stamp Auctions,” The Journal of Industrial Economics, Vol. LII, No. 4, December 2004, pp. 497-516.
- Dewan, S. and Mendelson, H., “Information Technology and Time-Based Competition in Financial Markets,” Management Science, May 1998, pp. 595-609.
- Dewan, S. and Min, C., “The Substitution of Information Technology for Other Factors of Production: A Firm-Level Analysis,” Management Science, December 1997, pp. 1660-1675.
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