-
In this paper the concept of program management in complex governance processes is considered from a self-organization perspective. First the emergence of program management is discussed. Subsequently it is argued that the major challenge for program management in complex processes is about realizing connective capacity. The paper concludes with the creation of a self-organization theory framework to analyze connective capacity in complex governance processes, built on insights from conservative and dissipative self-organization in complex systems.
-
-
The Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) call for a reduction by half of the estimated more than 1.5 billion people still lacking access to potable wat...
-
Aaron P. Avila (and Todd S. Aagaard, U.S. Department of Justice, Environment and Natural Resources Div., Kelly A Johnson, Acting Assistant Attorney Ge...
-
CiRBA Version 6.0 Adds Unique Cross-Functional Dashboards to Enable Executives, Capacity Managers, and Operations to Collectively Manage Efficiency an...
-
Modius upgrades data center monitoring tools to easily analyze performance of facilities and IT devices and derive actionable intelligence for operato...
-
FREMONT, Calif. -- @Road, Inc. (NASDAQ:ARDI), a global provider of next-generation solutions for Mobile Resource Management (MRM), today announced the...
-
CHONGQING, China, Jan. 26, 2011 /PRNewswire/ -- China Redstone Group, Inc. (OTC Bulletin Board: CGPI) ("China Redstone" or the "Company"), the largest private provider of cemetery products and services in Chongqing, China, today provided an update on its cemetery operations and growth plans.
Cemetery Operations
-
Integrien solution employs patented analytics to make capacity management approachable for all IT environments
IRVINE, Calif. -- Integrien Corporati...
-
We consider two capacity choice scenarios for the optimal location of facilities with fixed servers, stochastic demand, and congestion. Motivating applications include virtual call centers, consisting of geographically dispersed centers, walk-in health clinics, motor vehicle inspection stations, automobile emissions testing stations, and internal service systems. The choice of locations for such facilities influences both the travel cost and waiting times of users. In contrast to most previous research, we explicitly embed both customer travel/ connection and delay costs in the objective function and solve the location-allocation problem and choose facility capacities simultaneously. The choice of capacity for a facility that is viewed as a queueing system with Poisson arrivals and expo...