When Parallel Schools of Thought Fail to Converge: The Case of Cost Overruns in Project Management
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- What issues are contributing to the ideological divide in cost overrun research in PM?
- How can institutionalised diversity within PM fields contribute to the narrowing, rather than expansion, of theoretical gaps in PM?
2. Literature Review
2.1. Diversity and Fragmentation
2.2. Institutions and Specialisation
2.3. Ideological Distancing and Encapsulation
2.4. The Ideological “War of Words”
“it conveys a deterministic type of thinking we would have thought extinct in the academia after the probabilistic revolution has shown that nothing is deterministic in nature. The claim that we must know “what will occur” to make an estimate is akin to insisting on understanding the world in terms of Newtonian physics after quantum mechanics, something you would not get away with in physics.”
3. Method
4. Case Study
4.1. The Emergence of Engineering Evidence Science and Social Behavioural Science
4.2. Ideological Distancing: On De-Bunking “Fake News” in a Post-Truth Era
“This overly critical paper received a strong comment by another group of distinguished scholars: Bent Flyvbjerg, Atif Ansar, Alexander Budzier, Soren Buhl, Chantal Cantarelli, Massimo Garbuio, Carsten Glenting, Mette Skamris Holm, Dan Lovallo, Daniel Lunn, Eric Molin, Arne Ronnest, Allison Stewart and Bert van Wee, which was also published in 2018 with the title, “Five things you should know about cost overrun.””(ibid, pp. 174–190)
“Love and Ahiaga-Dagbui [5] may dislike research results like these because they identify members of their profession as unethical.”(p. 184)
“It is striking that this long-standing pattern (of cost overruns), which appears to prevail worldwide, continues unabated despite major improvements in technical capacity for cost estimation–suggestion that its causes lie primarily in the realm of politics rather those of engineering or accounting.”[85] (p. 221)
“If cost underestimation is to be effectively addressed and good decisions at the outset of a project are to be made in the future, then there is a need for these estimates to be based on reality and not on delusion or falsehoods. Weakening the link between evidence and decisions not only jeopardises the quality of transport policymaking, it threatens the entire enterprise of scientific research.”(p. 366)
“…… However, their bifurcation of the cost underestimation problem into error or lie presents the reader with a false dichotomy, an either/or choice that is practically invalid when juxtaposed with the real-world nature of procuring large infrastructure assets …… This false dichotomy forces the reader to reject complexity in complex decisions and focus on only the two extremes presented, with the assumption that no middle options are available.”(p. 365)
4.3. Failure to Converge—The Behavioural School of Thought
5. Discussion
For instance, they describe our research findings as “fake news”, “myths” (no less than 15 times), “canards”, “factoids”, “flagrant”, “rhetoric”, “misinformation”, and more. We are further accused of having “fooled many people” by having “been just as crafty as Machiavelli” as we “have feigned and dissembled information” “through our research.”(p. 358)
“As a factual observation, in our entire careers, we have never come across language in an academic journal like that used by Love and Ahiaga-Dagbui [5]. We suggest such language has no place in academic discourse.”(p. 175)
5.1. Pseudo Dichotomy in Logic
5.2. Contrasting Definitions of Error and Lie Through Institutional Variation
5.3. Encapsulation
“Recent developments in behavioural science are causing Kuhnian paradigm shifts in many fields, including project management and forecasting. Love and Ahiaga-Dagbui [5] are on the wrong side of this shift.”(p. 183)
“The treatment for the planning fallacy has now acquired a technical name, reference class forecasting, and Flyvbjerg has applied it to transportation projects in several countries.”[106]
“In behavioural terms, the causal chain starts with human bias which leads to underestimation of scope during planning which leads to unaccounted for scope changes during delivery which leads to cost overrun”, explicitly stating, “Your biggest risk is you …”(p. 183)
- The removal of parallel upbringing of theories through encapsulation;
- Bridging the gap created by the existing ideological divide between the dominant SOTs in cost overrun research;
- Removing conflating concepts, which have yielded little positive results, into an organised co-joining relationship.
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Chadee, A.A.; Chadee, X.T.; Ray, I.; Mwasha, A.; Martin, H.H. When Parallel Schools of Thought Fail to Converge: The Case of Cost Overruns in Project Management. Buildings 2021, 11, 321. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings11080321
Chadee AA, Chadee XT, Ray I, Mwasha A, Martin HH. When Parallel Schools of Thought Fail to Converge: The Case of Cost Overruns in Project Management. Buildings. 2021; 11(8):321. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings11080321
Chicago/Turabian StyleChadee, Aaron Anil, Xsitaaz Twinkle Chadee, Indrajit Ray, Abrahams Mwasha, and Hector Hugh Martin. 2021. "When Parallel Schools of Thought Fail to Converge: The Case of Cost Overruns in Project Management" Buildings 11, no. 8: 321. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings11080321
APA StyleChadee, A. A., Chadee, X. T., Ray, I., Mwasha, A., & Martin, H. H. (2021). When Parallel Schools of Thought Fail to Converge: The Case of Cost Overruns in Project Management. Buildings, 11(8), 321. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings11080321