Design Theory for Dynamic Complexity in Information Infrastructures: The Case of Building Internet
University of Oslo · Case Western Reserve University
Abstract
We propose a design theory that tackles dynamic complexity in the design for Information Infrastructures (IIs) defined as a shared, open, heterogeneous and evolving socio-technical system of Information Technology (IT) capabilities. Examples of IIs include the Internet, or industry-wide Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) networks. IIs are recursively composed of other infrastructures, platforms, applications and IT capabilities and controlled by emergent, distributed and episodic forms of control. II's evolutionary dynamics are nonlinear, path dependent and influenced by network effects and unbounded user and designer learning. The proposed theory tackles tensions between two design problems related to the II…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 121.71
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 127
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Computer science
- Adaptability
- The Internet
- Modular design
- Information system
- Distributed computing
- Generative Design
- Data science
- Industry, innovation and infrastructure