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Individual actions as community informative resources: a collective informative systems approach

Version 4 2024-03-13, 16:00
Version 3 2023-10-29, 12:40
journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-13, 16:00 authored by Eliseo Luis Vilalta-perdomo, Rebecca Herron
<p>This paper conceives communities (in this case, partnerships) as being able to become collective informative repositories of individual and collective actions that may better-inform their members. This paper presents one approach for studying if a community has become such an informative repository. The approach used here consists of introducing a formal language (Viable Systems Modelling, VSM) into one of the community nodes (a participant) and tracing if its use is seen in another node (another participant) - indicating the presence of a process of diffusion. This research design has been tested in a crime-reduction partnership in the UK. One of its members was asked to engage in the design and testing of this approach as a co-researcher. As a result, a questionnaire to map communication and control devices inside an organization was jointly developed. In keeping with VSM principles, the questionnaire encouraged participants to reflect on attenuation and amplification processes within their communications channels. To test the quality of the outcomes of this approach, members from another crime-reduction partnership were also invited to answer the survey; this was to confirm that VSM notions were not evident for those outside the development and testing of the questionnaire. The questionnaire indicated also its capability to make visible communication and organizational processes within collectives and its potential to stimulate self-organization, for those individuals who became familiar with VSM. Furthermore, this approach provided the authors with the capability to study information flows inside the two collectives, and contributed to an understanding of these flows as a model for building and maintaining a Community Informative System</p>

History

School affiliated with

  • Lincoln Business School (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Systemic Practice and Action Research

Volume

31

Issue

6

Pages/Article Number

581-596

Publisher

Springer

ISSN

1094-429X

eISSN

1573-9295

Date Submitted

2018-03-07

Date Accepted

2018-02-10

Date of First Publication

2018-02-10

Date of Final Publication

2018-12-01

Date Document First Uploaded

2018-03-07

ePrints ID

31112

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