Contexts and practices

Contexts and practices
Context Expertise Management Methodology
Decompositie type IOR

Activity



A context can be seen as a situation in which several entities collaborate to achieve goals. An entity can be anything, ranging from organizations and communities, departments and social networks to humans. The entities within a situation usually share common goals, but this is not a prerequisite. A situation is characterized primarily by the fact that entities interact in order to achieve goals, whether these goals are shared or not.

A context is described as a situation and roles within that situation. Technically speaking, a situation forms a context and the roles form sub-contexts in that context. Note that a role can be performed by one or more entity, and vice versa, an entity can perform many roles. Thus, context and sub-contexts do not form a strict tree-like hierarchy, but rather a network.

Another way to look at a context is to regard it as a practice, that is, particular ways to achieve goals. Remember that a context is made up of PQR elements, and that Q-activities introduce degrees of freedom. By selecting particular Q-activities and either implicitly or explicitly deselecting others we reduce the degrees of freedom in a context. Thus, we make choices in how we collectively achieve some goals. Naturally, we strive to optimization in terms of efficiency and effectiveness. A best practice can therefore be defined as ways of doing particular activities within a context in an effective and efficient way. Of course, the effectiveness and efficiency of ways of doing depend on the situation at hand. We can make this precise by characterizing a situation by means of conditions. If the activities in a practice leads to desired states as defined in conditions, then we have a situation with strong cohesion. On the other hand, if choices are made in a practice leading to low cohesion, we can speak of a bad practice. Thus, in EMont, a practice is nothing more than a selection and deselection device of intentional elements. Practices can be nested, and each sub-practice further reduces the number of degrees of freedom.

As we have seen, contexts can be nested. The top-level context contains the whole system, which is decomposed in sub-contexts containing sub-systems. In any context, we strive towards strong cohesion. However, in reality, this is something that can hardly be achieved, except in very simple systems with only a few stakeholders an almost no constraints. Typically, a sub-context exhibiting strong cohesion may have a negative effect on other sibling and top-level contexts. To put it differently, in a complex system we make compromises to accommodate all stakeholders to a certain extent.




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Komt van Type Connectie type Conditie Waarde Opmerkingen
Principles and conditions Connects seq
HZ University of Applied Sciences
Rijkswaterstaat, Ministerie van Infrastructuur en Milieu
Projectbureau Zeeweringen
Waterschap Scheldestromen
Provincie Zeeland
Deltares