WSC '95 Proceedings of the 27th conference on Winter simulation
Discrete simulation for business engineering
Computers and Industrial Engineering
Software Engineering
Integrating simulation in organizational design studies
International Journal of Information Management: The Journal for Information Professionals
Designing information systems requirements in context: insights from the theory of deferred action
International Journal of Business Information Systems
International Journal of Business Information Systems
Hi-index | 0.00 |
This paper looks at the challenge of developing a single online system to correctly handle the workflow of any legal arbitration case. In arbitration, the parties are always free to decide the process they will follow but existing online systems lack the flexibility to deal with general arbitration cases. A better system that can guide parties through the chosen process without compromising its legal status is needed. This single system needs to be flexible enough to support a wide range of different arbitration service providers. Conventional requirements engineering attacks uncertainty by getting the client to make choices. Flexible system design requires a different mindset that keeps these choices open until the system is in use. The key is in deciding which design decisions to offer and how they are presented to the user. This problem, and some strategies to deal with it, are illustrated by the analysis developed in the E-Arbitration-T project. The application of human activity simulation to validate the final design is also discussed.