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Complex Systems and the Conjunctive State

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ANZSYS/Managing the Complex V in Christchurch, New Zealand, December 5-7, 2005. ... bias, fallacy of centrality, hubris, normalization, typification, and bottom-up ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Complex Systems and the Conjunctive State


1
Complex Systems and the Conjunctive State
  • William H. Newell
  • Western College Program
  • Miami University (Ohio)
  • Jack W. Meek
  • College of Business and Public Management
  • University of La Verne (California)

2
Complex Systems and the Conjunctive State
  • ANZSYS/Managing the Complex V in Christchurch,
    New Zealand, December 5-7, 2005.
  • Feedback encouraged to meekj_at_ulv.edu or
    newellwh_at_muohio.edu

3
Complex Systems and the Conjunctive State
  • Focus of Our Interest Urban Systems
  • Focus on metropolitan governance
  • Issues of coordination in an era of tragedy of
    the commons
  • Of urban sprawl
  • Of transportation congestion
  • Of Health Access
  • Other issues

4
Complex Systems and the Conjunctive State
  • Focus of Interest Urban Systems
  • Emerging forms of governance
  • Responding to gaps of solution making found in
    jurisdictionally based governmental systems

5
Complex Systems and the Conjunctive State
  • Focus of Interest Urban Systems
  • Emerging forms of governance include policy
    networks
  • Regional alliances
  • Neighborhood alliances
  • Governmental alliances
  • Non-profit coordination

6
Systems Perspective (cont.)
  • Political Systems/Functions
  • Moving From Simple Systems (Easton 1953)
  • To Complex Systems

Dye, Thomas R., Understanding Public Policy
(Prentice Hall Publications,1995 p. 39).
7
Systems Failure
  • Failure of the Representative Democratic
    Accountability Feedback Loop
  • Democratic Deficits
  • Thinning of Reality

8
System Behavior Complexity Theory
  • Implications of Complex Systems (Behavior)
  • End of Hierarchy
  • Devolution and Communitarianism
  • Control is in the Hands of the Many
  • Autonomy is not Possible
  • Risk and Accountability is Jointly Shared
  • Trust is a Challenge
  • Anarchy is Possible
  • Self-Organizing (Intermediate Structures) Emerge

9
System Behavior Complexity Theory
  • Characteristics of Complex Systems
  • Multiple Logics (contradictory rules)
  • Non-Linear (formally unpredictable)
  • Dynamical (not in equilibrium)
  • Not Deterministic (but not completely random)
  • Often Not Well-Behaved (exhibiting sudden large
    changes of behavior)
  • Open With Permeable Boundaries, Produce Effects
    Disproportional To Their Causes

10
System Behavior Complexity Theory
  • Contain Paradoxes

11
Complexity and Post-Modern Solution Themes
  • Networks
  • Dialogues

12
Advances in the Complexity Literature
  • Human complex systems are now generally
    understood to be comprised of many diverse
    components that are loosely and often nonlinearly
    linked and that produce emergent patterns of
    systemic behavior.

13
Advances in the Complexity Literature
  • Complexity is now often distinguished from chaos
    by theorists interested in human behavior who now
    reject as inappropriate to human beings the
    mindless iteration of simple invariant rules
    underlying chaos theory.
  • (Anderson 1999 Lissack 2002 McDaniel Driebe
    2005 Mitleton-Kelly 2003 Newell 2001, 2003
    Newell Meek 2000 Smedes 2004),

14
Advances in the Complexity Literature
  • The dominant model has become complex adaptive
    systems (CAS), which focuses on the holistic
    patterns formed through human interactions
  • Weve come a long ways from models of complexity
    drawn from the natural sciences and applied to
    the social sciences without regard for the
    distinctive characteristics of human beings.

15
Advances in the Complexity Literature
  • The inferences drawn from CAS models for the
    management of organizations are considerably more
    useful than those drawn from earlier natural
    science-based models (see Newell Meek 2000).

16
Advances in the Complexity Literature
  • Anderson (1999) argues that managers should
    influence agents indirectly by changing the
    fitness landscape (e.g., providing longer-term
    rewards, setting priorities, and choosing the
    organizations domain) through trial and error

17
Advances in the Complexity Literature
  • Weick (McDaniel Driebe 2005) that To prepare
    for the unexpected means that you have to offset
    strong cognitive predispositions such as
    confirmation bias, fallacy of centrality, hubris,
    normalization, typification, and bottom-up
    salience of cues (63)

18
Advances in the Complexity Literature
  • Holley (McDaniel Driebe 2005)
  • Underlying self-organizing systemsare simple
    design principles which she enumerates (169)
  • Lewin Regine (McMillan 2002)
  • Organizational practices turn into rules so keep
    them few, and to try small-scale experiments
    instead of fast, large-scale interventions (104)

19
Advances in the Complexity Literature
  • Bonifacio Bouquet (Minati Pessa 2002)
    Knowledge management should be perceived as the
    problem of coordinatingmultiple sources of
    knowledge in a distributed (that is, non
    centralized) way (300)
  • Espejo (Mitleton-Kelly 2003)
  • organizational complexity needs to be embodied
    in autonomous systems within autonomous systems
    within autonomous systems (53).

20
Advances in the Complexity Literature
  • Authors generally agree on the importance of
    flattening hierarchies, facilitating informal
    networks, and diversifying agents.

21
Complex Systems and the Conjunctive State
  • Network Theorists Urban Systems
  • Rethinking Our Governance
  • Involvement in (policy) networks is more
    apparent.
  • Horizontal Links
  • Management Implications
  • Personal Skills Implications

22
Complex Systems and the Conjunctive State
  • Focus of Study Urban Systems
  • Rethinking Our Governance
  • Moving from Hierarchies to Networks
  • Network Involvement Instrument Findings

23
Complex Systems and the Conjunctive State
  • Network Involvement--Formal Networks
  • Network Characteristics
  • 65 with 11 or more orgs involved
  • 81 network abides by rules
  • 47 no sovereign in network

24
Complex Systems and the Conjunctive State
  • Network Involvement--Formal Networks
  • Individual Network Involvement
  • Frequency 32 daily
  • Time Spent 23 (ave) 50 _at_ 10 or less
  • Resources Spent 20 (ave) 75 _at_ 10 or less
  • Personal Influence 19 high, 35medium, 45low

25
Complex Systems and the Conjunctive State
  • Network Involvement--Formal Networks
  • Network Value to Individual
  • Increases Responsibility in Org 62
  • Portion Individual Success is Dependent on
    Involvement 35 (Ave) 60 _at_ 25 or less

26
Political Systems and Environments
  • Network Involvement--Formal Networks
  • Network Value to Organization
  • Network involvement meshes with Organizational
    goals 97
  • Quality of services dependent on network 68

27
Political Systems and Environments
  • Network Involvement--Informal Networks
  • Network Characteristics
  • 63 with 11 or more orgs involved
  • 76--network abides by rules
  • 55--no sovereign control in network

28
Political Systems and Environments
  • Network Involvement--Informal Networks
  • Individual Network Involvement
  • Frequency 66 monthly or less often
  • Time Spent 9.5 (ave) 88 _at_ 10 or less
  • Resources Spent 4.7 (ave) 60 devote 5-10
  • Personal Influence 18(high), 30 (medium), 52
    (low)

29
Political Systems and Environments
  • Network Involvement--Informal Networks
  • Network Value to Individual
  • Increases Responsibility in Org 20
  • Portion Success Dependent on Involvement 24

30
Political Systems and Environments
  • Network Involvement--Informal Networks
  • Network Value to Organization
  • Meshes with Goals of organization 93
  • Quality of Service Delivery Dependent on
    Involvement 54

31
Political Systems and Environments
  • Network Involvement, Complex Systems and
    Conjunction
  • Horizontal vs Vertical Management
  • Peer and Colleague relations vs Superior and
    Subordinate relations
  • Implications for Management Skills?
  • What are the skills of collaboration?
  • Extended leadership roles across departments,
    organizations
  • Diversity of participations in networks
  • Collaborative Leadership Instrument.

32
Political Systems and Environments
  • Collaboration in Urban Environments
  • Agranoff--The era of the managers
    cross-boundary interdependency challenge has
    arrived, as has the world of working in the
    network of organizations. Public functions are no
    longer the exclusive domain of governments. (p.
    vii)

33
Political Systems and Environments
  • Collaboration in Urban Environments
  • Agranoff--Types of Collaborative Management
    Activities
  • Information Sharing
  • Adjustment Seeking
  • Policy making and strategy making
  • Resource Exchange
  • Project Based

34
Political Systems and Environments
  • Collaboration in Urban Environments
  • These emergent collaborative management skills do
    not supplant the traditional list of interlocal
    management actions, structural adaptations and
    join purchasing or servicing, but they add to the
    expanding nature of what needs to be known about
    managers collaborative activity within
    communities. (p. 97)

35
Political Systems and Environments
  • Collaboration in Urban Environments
  • The contacts, activities, policy tools and other
    connections discovered in this study lead us to
    conclude that the capacities required to operate
    successfully in collaborative settings are
    different from the capacities needed to succeed
    at managing a single organization (p. 175)

36
Political Systems and Environments
  • Collaboration in Urban Environments
  • . . . collaborative management is in need of a
    knowledge base equivalent to the organizational
    paradigm of bureaucratic management that can both
    inform and improve practice (p. 175)

37
Political Systems and Environments
  • Collaboration in Urban Environments
  • Agranoff--Findings--knowledge base on
  • Skills
  • Collaborative settings
  • Factors to improve success (trust, perception of
    common interest)
  • Power and Authority
  • Accountability
  • Added Values

38
Political Systems and Environments
  • Lessons From Agranoff--Ten Lessons on How to
    Manage in Network
  • From Robert Agranoff, Leveraging Networks A
    Guide for Public Managers Working Across
    Organizations (IBM Endowment for The Business of
    Government, March 2003.

39
Political Systems and Environments
  • Be a representative of your agency and the
    network.
  • (balance the dualism of agency and collective
    concerns--boundary spanner, continuous
    involvement)

40
Political Systems and Environments
  • 2. Take a Share of the Administrative Burden
  • (most network staffs are limited volunteering is
    a necessity)

41
Political Systems and Environments
  • 3. Operate by agenda orchestration.
  • (Managing the interaction time, learn the
    players, move toward a tangible accomplishment.

42
Political Systems and Environments
  • 4. Recognize shared expertise-based authority
  • (change hats from boss to member, everyone can
    learn from the network experience, understand
    everyone is in charge)

43
Political Systems and Environments
  • 5. Stay within the decision bounds of your
    network
  • (follow core mission, dont step on agency
    decision prerogatives)

44
Political Systems and Environments
  • 6. Accommodate and adjust while maintaining
    purpose.
  • (talk it out, it is a protracted effort)

45
Political Systems and Environments
  • 7. Be creative as possible.
  • (Networks rely on shared information, one must be
    different than the sum of the parts)

46
Political Systems and Environments
  • 8. Be patient and use interpersonal skills
  • (Be patient, push and you lose, recognize the
    learning curve)

47
Political Systems and Environments
  • 9. Recruit constantly
  • (touch as many bases as you can)

48
Political Systems and Environments
  • 10. Emphasize incentives.
  • (Keep the information flowing, outreach, let
    people know who you are.)

49
Political Systems and Environments
  • Russell Linden, Working Across Boundaries
  • Benefits of Collaboration
  • Better use of scarce resources cost savings
  • Ability to create something that you cant create
    on your own
  • Higher quality, more integrated producer or
    service for the end users
  • Potential for organizational and individual
    learning
  • Better ability to achieve important outcomes (p.
    7)

50
Political Systems and Environments
  • Russell Linden, Working Across Boundaries
  • Framework for Collaboration
  • Basics in Place
  • Principals have open, trusting relationships
  • Stakes are high
  • Participants include a constituency for
    collaboration
  • Leadership follows collaborative principles

51
Political Systems and Environments
  • Russell Linden, Working Across Boundaries
  • Keys to Successful Collaboration
  • Maintain continuity of leadership among the
    parties
  • Help each party play to its strengths
  • Keep collaborative efforts voluntary, not
    mandatory
  • Acquire flexible schedules
  • Measure and post results of the collaborative
    effort
  • Balance the need to plan with the requirements
    for results (p. 187)

52
Complex Systems and Conjunction
  • Table 1 CAS Management Heuristics and PA Network
    Literature

53
Looking Ahead Three Challenges
  • Interdisciplinary Integration
  • It is one thing to identify the pattern of a
    complex system and understand what lies behind
    it. It is quite another to predict the
    consequences of introducing a change in the
    system.
  • It is even possible that understanding of a
    complex problem may simply not lead to its
    solution. In fact, complexity theorists who
    focus on chaotic systems tend to emphasize the
    unpredictability of changes to systems
    characterized by complexity.

54
Looking Ahead Three Challenges
  • The Limits of CAS
  • Because those groups, institutions, and spheres
    are not included explicitly in the model, their
    influence on behavior within the complex system
    is indirect at best.
  • By ignoring what takes place inside each of those
    spheres, their model cannot explain why an impact
    changes the result is an incomplete explanation
    of the behavior. As Janssen (2002) wryly
    observes, CAS models do not necessarily
    represent theoretical insights from behavioral
    science (7).

55
Looking Ahead Three Challenges
  • Unresolved Tensions
  • How does one balance out human needs for
    stability and predictability and the
    functionality of human habits and routines with
    institutional needs for adaptability and
    emergence?
  • How can a manager determine when employees need
    free reign to move the organization towards far
    from equilibrium self-organization, and when
    they need to be sacked for incompetence?

56
Looking Ahead Three Challenges
  • Unresolved Tensions
  • What features of complex adaptive systems are
    essential, and what ones are the product of the
    way those systems are currently modeled?
  • What role do individual agents (located
    simultaneously within numerous societal
    subsystems) play in the power law distribution of
    emergence (that emergent effects are replicated
    on multiple scales) (Anderson 1999 Bentley
    Maschner 2003 Bak in Cowan 1999)? I.e., is there
    a human source of the fractal properties of
    emergence in human institutions?

57
Looking Ahead Three Challenges
  • Unresolved Tensions
  • How complicated, vague, variable, or stochastic
    can the rules followed by agents be and still
    produce emergent self-organization? After all,
    individuals constantly balance out conflicting
    I and We imperatives, with the tension
    between those imperatives shifting in response to
    factors in many dimensions.

58
Looking Ahead Three Challenges
  • IN SUMMARY
  • We have had identified an emergent trend in
    metropolitan governanceconjunctionthat calls
    upon an understanding of management and
    administration.
  • It is found that network researchers--based on
    grounded theoryhave found similar management
    lessons as those found in the complexity
    literature.
  • The challenge ahead is to understand these
    emergent features from both analytical and
    practical perspectives so as to advance our
    understanding of managing complex environments
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