Managing Complexity: A Practitioner's Guide
A special issue of Systems (ISSN 2079-8954). This special issue belongs to the section "Systems Practice in Social Science".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (29 February 2024) | Viewed by 57751
Special Issue Editors
Interests: complexity thinking; team science; distributed leadership; decision making, flow
Interests: sense-making; anthro-complexity; decision making
Interests: lean; agile; flow; scrum; team science; organization design
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Organizations operate between the edge of order and chaos in today's globally interconnected environment. Applying known processes to known problems (ordered) is the preferred way of work. Unfortunately, due to the entanglement of geopolitical conflicts, disruptions in the global supply chain, and managing a pandemic, among many other recent events (edge of chaos), organizations must be more adaptive and resilient while letting go of current practices to find new ways of work.
At the same time, academic disciplines are challenged to repurpose their theories, methods, and philosophies to remain relevant in this age of complexity. Research has shifted its focus to using large research teams because they know how to address complex and wicked problems. The methods used for traditional complicated issues are insufficient for these complex problems, calling for trans-disciplinary research efforts. This new direction requires disciplines to repurpose their methods and theories by integrating them with other disciplines, resulting in new approaches to meet today's problems.
Today, it has become more essential to cross the divide between theory and practice once and for all. Just as organizations are being forced to look for new ways of work, academic disciplines are integrating their methods and theories with other disciplines to find new ways of conducting research. Managing in times of complexity requires integrating theory and practice because neither can be sustained without the other. Organizations need a quicker response from academic disciplines to help them navigate these troubling waters. To do so, new relationships need to be generated between academia and organizations for them to integrate knowledge and practices to meet today's uncertainty.
This Special Issue takes a step in the right direction by focusing on frameworks, methods, techniques, and theories that effectively manage complexity for organizations. Each author provides their definition of complexity from their contextual perspective while proving the method that they found to be successful in managing complexity. These assemblages involve integrating organizational and academic methods that are repurposed to meet the contextual environmental needs faced by executive leaders today. This integration occurs at the intersection of complexity (environment), practice (organization), and theory (academic). The assemblage of frameworks, methods, techniques, and theories presented in this Special Issue provides a pragmatic overview for leaders and practitioners to support practice when managing complexity.
Dr. John R. Turner
Prof. Dave Snowden
Nigel Thurlow
Prof. Dr. Andrea Furlan
Guest Editors
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Keywords
- complexity
- way of working
- assemblages
- practice
- theory
- managing
- complex adaptive systems
- environmental
- systems
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