The Institutional Compass: Method, Use and Scope

Friend, Michèle Indira.

The Institutional Compass: Method, Use and Scope [electronic resource] / by Michèle Indira Friend. - 1st ed. 2022. - XIX, 202 p. 1 illus. online resource. - Methodos Series, Methodological Prospects in the Social Sciences, 18 2542-9892 ; . - Methodos Series, Methodological Prospects in the Social Sciences, 18 .

Part I: Introduction -- Chapter 1. General Introduction -- Chapter 2. Vocabulary -- Chapter 3. The State of the Art in Decision Making -- Part II: The Method for Constructing The Institutional Compass -- Chapter 4. The Three Qualities Again -- Chapter 5. Constructing an Institutional Compass: Methodology -- Part III: Scope: More Uses of The Institutional Compass and Some Extensions -- Chapter 6. Merging the Compass with Systems Science -- Chapter 7. Adapting The Compass to Align with Ecological Economics Thinking -- Chapter 8. Further Manipulations and Extensions using the Notion of Sphere -- Chapter 9. The Compass as Representation -- Chapter 10. The Compass for Qualitative Accounting. Part IV: Actual Case-Studies and Conclusion -- Chapter 11. Case Study I: The World Health Organisation. Chapter 12. Case Study II: Report on Produce Label Project -- Chapter 13. Case Study III: Regional Compass Hauts-de-France, Superimposing a Biorefinery. Chapter 14. Concluding Philosophical Remarks.

Open Access

This open access book presents a new generation multi-criteria, multi-stake holder, decision aide, called an "institutional compass". Based on hard data, the compass tells us what quality-direction we are heading in as an institution, region, system or organisation. The quality is not chosen from the usual scalar qualities of: good, neutral and bad. Instead, it is a quality chosen between: harmony, discipline and excitement. None is good in and of itself. We need some of each. The compass marks a new generation in four respects. 1. The representation of the data is intuitive and simple to understand, and therefore can be used to communicate and justify policy decisions. 2. Any data can be included, i.e., none is excluded. This makes the compass tailored to particular situations, voices and contexts. 3. The data includes different time horizons and different types of value: monetary, use, social, sentimental, religious, intrinsic, existential... 4. The process of compass construction can be made inclusive at several junctions. An institutional compass can be extended to evaluate products, add normativity to a systems analysis, reflect world-views such as that of ecological economists or function as an accounting system to manage scarce resources. There are four parts to the book. The first part introduces the general ideas behind the compass. In the second part, the author presents the method for constructing the compass. This includes data collection, data analysis and a mathematical formula to aggregate the data into a single holistic reading. In the third part, the author extends the methodology: to incorporate it into systems science, adding a normative and quality-direction dimension, to use it as a non-linear accounting method and more thoroughly to reflect the philosophy of ecological economists to give a real measure of sustainability. In the fourth part, we see three case studies: one for the World Health Organisation, a second is the use of the compass to label products in a shop and the third is as a regional compass for Hauts-de-France. The book ends with philosophical conclusions. Throughout the book, we see tight arguments, refreshing ideas and a thorough treatment of objectivity in decision making.

9783031054532

10.1007/978-3-031-05453-2 doi


Economic sociology.
Operations research.
Database management.
Philosophy and social sciences.
Economic Sociology.
Operations Research and Decision Theory.
Database Management.
Philosophy of the Social Sciences.

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