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Systems Engineering for Business Process Change: New Directions is
a collection of papers resulting from an EPSRC managed research
programme set up to investigate the relationships between Legacy IT
Systems and Business Processes. The papers contained in this volume
report the results from the projects funded by the programme, which
ran between 1997 and 2001. An earlier volume, published in 2000,
reported interim results.
Bringing together researchers from diverse backgrounds in Computer
Science, Information Systems, Engineering and Business Schools,
this book explores the problems experienced by IT-dependent
businesses that have to implement changing business processes in
the context of their investment in legacy systems. The book
presents some of the solutions investigated through the
collaborations set up within the research programme.
Whether you are a researcher interested in the ideas that were
generated by the research programme, or a user trying to understand
the nature of the problems and their solutions, you cannot fail to
be inspired by the writings contained in this volume.
This important, state-of-the-art book brings together for the first
time in one volume the two areas of Legacy Systems and Business
Processes. The research discussed has arisen from the EPSRC
research programme on Systems Engineering for Business Process
Change, and the book contains contributions from leading experts in
the field.
Both the consumer and supplier of IT have problems with legacy
systems and business process change, so Systems Engineering for
Business Process Change will be of great interest to practitioners
who are encountering, or likely to encounter, problems with legacy
systems and business process change, as well as researchers
preparing future research programmes, and those studying system and
business evolution.
A very large proportion of commercial and industrial concerns in
the UK find their business competitiveness dependent on huge
quantities of already installed, legacy IT. Often the nature of
their business is such that, to remain competitive, they have to be
able to change their business processes. Sometimes the required
change is radical and revolutionary, but more often the required
change is incremental. For such incremental change, a major systems
engineering problem arises. The cost and delay involved in changing
the installed IT to meet the changed business requirements is much
too high. In order to address this issue the UK Engineering and
Physical Science Research Council (EPSRC) set up, in 1996, a
managed research programme entitled Systems Engineering for
Business Process Change (SEBPC). I was appointed as co-ordinator of
the programme. The overall aim of this new managed research
programme was to release the full potential of IT as an enabler of
business process change, and to overcome the disabling effects
which the build-up of legacy systems has on such change. As such,
this aim addressed a stated objective of the Information Technology
and Computer Science (IT&CS) part of EPSRC to encourage
research at a system level.
Systems Engineering for Business Process Change: New Directions is
a collection of papers resulting from an EPSRC managed research
programme set up to investigate the relationships between Legacy IT
Systems and Business Processes. The papers contained in this volume
report the results from the projects funded by the programme, which
ran between 1997 and 2001. An earlier volume, published in 2000,
reported interim results. Bringing together researchers from
diverse backgrounds in Computer Science, Information Systems,
Engineering and Business Schools, this book explores the problems
experienced by IT-dependent businesses that have to implement
changing business processes in the context of their investment in
legacy systems. The book presents some of the solutions
investigated through the collaborations set up within the research
programme. Whether you are a researcher interested in the ideas
that were generated by the research programme, or a user trying to
understand the nature of the problems and their solutions, you
cannot fail to be inspired by the writings contained in this
volume.
Latin America in the Modern World is the first text to situate the
history of Latin America within a wider global narrative. Written
by leading scholars, the book focuses on five themes: state
formation; the construction of national identity through popular
culture and religion; economics and commodities; race, class, and
gender; and the environment. Emphasizing the distinct experiences
of each of the Latin American countries, the book provides students
with an entry point into understanding this vital region. Instead
of suggesting that all Latin American nations have an
interchangeable heritage, the authors seek to clearly identify
themes, topics, people, and intellectual currents that help to knit
the history of modern Latin America into a coherent category of
study. While providing in-depth coverage of the history of the
three largest Latin American countries (Mexico, Brazil, and
Argentina), Latin America in the Modern World also offers case
studies from almost all of the countries, including Central
American and Andean nations.
This book reviews the past, present and future generation and use
of electricity. While noting the importance of electricity to the
well-being of people, it argues that all means of electricity
generation have adverse ecological consequences. The ecological
effects of all the main forms of electricity generation, storage
and transmission are reviewed in 14 chapters. The chapters briefly
cover the engineering and physics of each method of electricity
generation followed by a description of the different ways in which
the technology interacts with the natural world. Finally, sections
consider the importance of these impacts and how they can be
mitigated or avoided. A final chapter summarizes the issues and
emphasizes that the only way to truly minimize the impacts of
electricity generation is to reduce our consumption and
transmission. Future efforts should continue to focus on increasing
the efficiency of light production, refrigeration, electrical
appliances and batteries.
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