Title :
Self-organizing Cooperative Dynamics in Government Extended Enterprises: Essential concepts
Author :
John, Lawrence ; McCormick, Tom ; McCormick, Patricia M. ; Boardman, John
Author_Institution :
Appl. Syst. Thinking Inst., Anal. Services, Inc., Arlington, VA, USA
Abstract :
An extended enterprise is, by definition, both a system of systems and a complex dynamical system. We define government-run joint and interagency efforts as “government extended enterprises” (GEEs). GEEs comprise sets of effectively autonomous organizations that must cooperate voluntarily to achieve desired outcomes. Within the discipline of systems thinking, Boardman and Sauser have detailed a set of “differentiating characteristics” for systems of systems. We believe decision makers can leverage a set of four “canonical forces” to manipulate these characteristics to raise the levels of cooperation within a GEE and its operational effectiveness at the GEE level. This paper describes the concepts involved and postulates the relationships among them. A companion paper subtitled “Experimental Methodology” discusses a game theoretic methodology that executes a real-world case in an agent-based model as a proof-of-concept.
Keywords :
decision making; game theory; local government; systems engineering; Boardman and Sauser; agent based model; autonomous organizations; canonical forces; complex dynamical system; decision makers; differentiating characteristics; experimental methodology; game theoretic methodology; government extended enterprise; government run joint; self-organizing cooperative dynamics; Collaboration; Decision making; Force; Government; Humans; Terrorism; Stag Hunt; agent-based modeling; complex dynamical systems; extended enterprise; game theory; institutional analysis; system of systems; systems thinking;
Conference_Titel :
Systems Conference (SysCon), 2011 IEEE International
Conference_Location :
Montreal, QC
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-9494-1
DOI :
10.1109/SYSCON.2011.5929043