Public and Private Interorganizational Networks Impact on InformationInfrastructure Development - By Ecology Community Symbiotic Perspective

碩士 === 國立臺灣科技大學 === 資訊管理系 === 98 === In recent years, there has been an increasement of information infrastructure outsourcing projects. Governmental organizations hope for the projects to become more targeted and close to actual demands along with the benefit of spreading risks via cooperating with...

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Main Authors: Sih-han Chen, 陳思涵
Other Authors: Tzu-chuan Chou
Format: Others
Language:zh-TW
Published: 2010
Online Access:http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/25539036948358256966
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spelling ndltd-TW-098NTUS53960272016-04-22T04:23:32Z http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/25539036948358256966 Public and Private Interorganizational Networks Impact on InformationInfrastructure Development - By Ecology Community Symbiotic Perspective 公私組織間網絡對資訊基礎建設發展的影響-以群落共生為分析觀點 Sih-han Chen 陳思涵 碩士 國立臺灣科技大學 資訊管理系 98 In recent years, there has been an increasement of information infrastructure outsourcing projects. Governmental organizations hope for the projects to become more targeted and close to actual demands along with the benefit of spreading risks via cooperating with private companies. In earlier years, most of outsourcing research, particularly those focusing on the information infrastructure projects that came with complexity, took binary approaches. This study suggests that the factors contributing the success of those projects involve more than those emerging from both organizations of outsourcing. A more valid investigation needs to take into consideration of the whole network in which both parties are connected. This study refers the cooperational relationships between governmental and non-governmental organizations as “networks,” taking from an organizational ecology scope along the aid of community level analysis. Interorganizational networks increase their viability through mutual resource-sharing and pursuing common goals. New resources can be generated in such a network mode of cooperation, which makes it capable of overcoming environment uncertainty. This study takes organizational ecology theory as its theoretical framework, and integrates data gathered from the process of large-scale information infrastructure outsourcing projects. In this paper, the study-case is discussed in terms of ecological process, which in turn is divided into three evolutionary phases: community initial phase, evolutionary symbiotic phase and structural maintenance phase. Furthermore, it presents a community ecology graph to illustrate every organization in community the entering and exiting and the process of cooperation and symbiosis. Finally, the paper suggests a conclusion derived from the community structure, density, and centrality of the study-case, and summarizes the factors that impact large-scale information infrastructure outsourcing developments in the network as (1) complexity and intensity of interorganizational relationships among the organizations, and (2) the amount of connective nodes that an organization has and their strengths. Tzu-chuan Chou 周子銓 2010 學位論文 ; thesis 93 zh-TW
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description 碩士 === 國立臺灣科技大學 === 資訊管理系 === 98 === In recent years, there has been an increasement of information infrastructure outsourcing projects. Governmental organizations hope for the projects to become more targeted and close to actual demands along with the benefit of spreading risks via cooperating with private companies. In earlier years, most of outsourcing research, particularly those focusing on the information infrastructure projects that came with complexity, took binary approaches. This study suggests that the factors contributing the success of those projects involve more than those emerging from both organizations of outsourcing. A more valid investigation needs to take into consideration of the whole network in which both parties are connected. This study refers the cooperational relationships between governmental and non-governmental organizations as “networks,” taking from an organizational ecology scope along the aid of community level analysis. Interorganizational networks increase their viability through mutual resource-sharing and pursuing common goals. New resources can be generated in such a network mode of cooperation, which makes it capable of overcoming environment uncertainty. This study takes organizational ecology theory as its theoretical framework, and integrates data gathered from the process of large-scale information infrastructure outsourcing projects. In this paper, the study-case is discussed in terms of ecological process, which in turn is divided into three evolutionary phases: community initial phase, evolutionary symbiotic phase and structural maintenance phase. Furthermore, it presents a community ecology graph to illustrate every organization in community the entering and exiting and the process of cooperation and symbiosis. Finally, the paper suggests a conclusion derived from the community structure, density, and centrality of the study-case, and summarizes the factors that impact large-scale information infrastructure outsourcing developments in the network as (1) complexity and intensity of interorganizational relationships among the organizations, and (2) the amount of connective nodes that an organization has and their strengths.
author2 Tzu-chuan Chou
author_facet Tzu-chuan Chou
Sih-han Chen
陳思涵
author Sih-han Chen
陳思涵
spellingShingle Sih-han Chen
陳思涵
Public and Private Interorganizational Networks Impact on InformationInfrastructure Development - By Ecology Community Symbiotic Perspective
author_sort Sih-han Chen
title Public and Private Interorganizational Networks Impact on InformationInfrastructure Development - By Ecology Community Symbiotic Perspective
title_short Public and Private Interorganizational Networks Impact on InformationInfrastructure Development - By Ecology Community Symbiotic Perspective
title_full Public and Private Interorganizational Networks Impact on InformationInfrastructure Development - By Ecology Community Symbiotic Perspective
title_fullStr Public and Private Interorganizational Networks Impact on InformationInfrastructure Development - By Ecology Community Symbiotic Perspective
title_full_unstemmed Public and Private Interorganizational Networks Impact on InformationInfrastructure Development - By Ecology Community Symbiotic Perspective
title_sort public and private interorganizational networks impact on informationinfrastructure development - by ecology community symbiotic perspective
publishDate 2010
url http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/25539036948358256966
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