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Social Systems and Design [electronic resource] / edited by Gary S. Metcalf.

Contributor(s): Metcalf, Gary S [editor.] | SpringerLink (Online service).
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookSeries: Translational Systems Sciences: 1Publisher: Tokyo : Springer Japan : Imprint: Springer, 2014Description: XI, 238 p. 29 illus., 16 illus. in color. online resource.Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9784431544784.Subject(s): Business | Management science | Economics | Social sciences | Economics | Economics, general | Business and Management, general | Social Sciences, generalAdditional physical formats: Printed edition:: No titleDDC classification: 330 Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
1 Creating Social Systems (Gary S. Metcalf) -- 2 An Epic Learning Journey: From the Club of Rome to Dialogic Design Science and DEMOSOPHIA (Alexander N. Christakis) -- 3 Cybernetics of Governance: The Cybersyn Project 1971-1973 (Raul Espejo) -- 4 Systemic Design Principles for Complex Social Systems (Peter H. Jones) -- 5 The Theory and Practice of Third Phase Science (Ken C. Bausch) -- 6 Designing the Means for Governing the Commons (Thomas R. Flanagan) -- 7 Co-laboratories of Democracy: Best Choices for Designing Sustainable Futures (Yiannis Laouris, Kevin M. C. Dye, Marios Michaelides, and Alexander, N. Christakis) -- 8 Better Late than Never: Open Systems Theory's Plan to Deal with Climate Change (Merrelyn Emery) -- 9 Social Systems Design in Organizational Change (Doug Walton).
In: Springer eBooksSummary: We live in the worlds that we help to create every day. Every activity either supports an existing system or effects some change, however small. But is it possible to consciously create the worlds in which we want to live? This volume brings together systems theorists and practitioners who have worked on that question for decades. It explores connections between design and systems ideas to explain why some efforts have been more successful than others, and what is needed if we are to move forward. It offers reflections on early and large-scale attempts at impacting societal systems, as well as proposals for taking those ideas into the future. Examples date back to the Club of Rome in the 1960s and look forward to the creation of ecologically sustainable systems in the future. They address the need for collaboration and inclusion in settings from communities to corporations. And while theories are presented as support for the examples, they are explained in practical ways meant to be accessible both to students and to general readers.
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1 Creating Social Systems (Gary S. Metcalf) -- 2 An Epic Learning Journey: From the Club of Rome to Dialogic Design Science and DEMOSOPHIA (Alexander N. Christakis) -- 3 Cybernetics of Governance: The Cybersyn Project 1971-1973 (Raul Espejo) -- 4 Systemic Design Principles for Complex Social Systems (Peter H. Jones) -- 5 The Theory and Practice of Third Phase Science (Ken C. Bausch) -- 6 Designing the Means for Governing the Commons (Thomas R. Flanagan) -- 7 Co-laboratories of Democracy: Best Choices for Designing Sustainable Futures (Yiannis Laouris, Kevin M. C. Dye, Marios Michaelides, and Alexander, N. Christakis) -- 8 Better Late than Never: Open Systems Theory's Plan to Deal with Climate Change (Merrelyn Emery) -- 9 Social Systems Design in Organizational Change (Doug Walton).

We live in the worlds that we help to create every day. Every activity either supports an existing system or effects some change, however small. But is it possible to consciously create the worlds in which we want to live? This volume brings together systems theorists and practitioners who have worked on that question for decades. It explores connections between design and systems ideas to explain why some efforts have been more successful than others, and what is needed if we are to move forward. It offers reflections on early and large-scale attempts at impacting societal systems, as well as proposals for taking those ideas into the future. Examples date back to the Club of Rome in the 1960s and look forward to the creation of ecologically sustainable systems in the future. They address the need for collaboration and inclusion in settings from communities to corporations. And while theories are presented as support for the examples, they are explained in practical ways meant to be accessible both to students and to general readers.

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