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Toward an Interdisciplinary Engineering and Management of Complex IT-Intensive Organizational Systems: A Systems View

Toward an Interdisciplinary Engineering and Management of Complex IT-Intensive Organizational Systems: A Systems View

Manuel Mora, Ovsei Gelman, Moti Frank, David B. Paradice, Francisco Cervantes, Guisseppi A. Forgionne
Copyright: © 2008 |Volume: 1 |Issue: 1 |Pages: 24
ISSN: 1935-570X|EISSN: 1935-5718|ISSN: 1935-570X|EISBN13: 9781615203444|EISSN: 1935-5718|DOI: 10.4018/jitsa.2008010101
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MLA

Mora, Manuel, et al. "Toward an Interdisciplinary Engineering and Management of Complex IT-Intensive Organizational Systems: A Systems View." IJITSA vol.1, no.1 2008: pp.1-24. http://doi.org/10.4018/jitsa.2008010101

APA

Mora, M., Gelman, O., Frank, M., Paradice, D. B., Cervantes, F., & Forgionne, G. A. (2008). Toward an Interdisciplinary Engineering and Management of Complex IT-Intensive Organizational Systems: A Systems View. International Journal of Information Technologies and Systems Approach (IJITSA), 1(1), 1-24. http://doi.org/10.4018/jitsa.2008010101

Chicago

Mora, Manuel, et al. "Toward an Interdisciplinary Engineering and Management of Complex IT-Intensive Organizational Systems: A Systems View," International Journal of Information Technologies and Systems Approach (IJITSA) 1, no.1: 1-24. http://doi.org/10.4018/jitsa.2008010101

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Abstract

An accelerated scientific, engineering, and industrial progress in information technologies has fostered the deployment of Complex Information Technology (highly dependent) Organizational Systems (CITOS). The benefits have been so strong that CITOS have proliferated in a variety of large and midsized organizations to support various generic intra-organizational processes and inter-organizational activities. But their systems engineering, management, and research complexity have been substantially raised in the last decade, and the CITOS realization is presenting new technical, organizational, management, and research challenges. In this article, we use a conceptual research method to review the engineering, management, and research complexity issues raised for CITOS, and develop the rationality of the following propositions: P1: a plausible response to cope with CITOS is an interdisciplinary engineering and management body of knowledge; and P2: such a realization is plausible through the incorporation of foundations, principles, methods, tools, and best practices from the systems approach by way of systems engineering and software engineering disciplines. Discussion of first benefits, critical barriers, and effectiveness measures to reach this academic proposal are presented.

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