A framework for information systems architecture
IBM Systems Journal
Design patterns: elements of reusable object-oriented software
Design patterns: elements of reusable object-oriented software
Communications of the ACM
Requirements engineering: a roadmap
Proceedings of the Conference on The Future of Software Engineering
Security Engineering with Patterns: Origins, Theoretical Models, and New Applications
Security Engineering with Patterns: Origins, Theoretical Models, and New Applications
Adaptive and fault tolerant medical vest for life-critical medical monitoring
Proceedings of the 2005 ACM symposium on Applied computing
Model driven security: From UML models to access control infrastructures
ACM Transactions on Software Engineering and Methodology (TOSEM)
Proceedings of the 11th international conference on Artificial intelligence and law
Security and trust requirements engineering
Foundations of Security Analysis and Design III
Applying security engineering to build security countermeasures: an introduction
PARA'04 Proceedings of the 7th international conference on Applied Parallel Computing: state of the Art in Scientific Computing
Journal of Medical Systems
Organizational Patterns for Security and Dependability: From Design to Application
International Journal of Secure Software Engineering
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The analysis of security incidents and frauds has shown that several vulnerabilities of IT systems are due to loopholes in the policies and procedures adopted by organizations as well as in their structure. Organizations have thus to address security and dependability issues by analyzing their organizational setting. In this paper, we present a methodology to support the deployment of Security & Dependability patterns according to their position in the Enterprise Architecture and the underlying system infrastructures. The methodology discriminates the pattern deployment process between recommendations and guidelines. Recommendations concretize the deployment with refined software and/or hardware related patterns, whereas guidelines specify the organizational patterns in terms of the system-to-be, proposing human-resource and/or policy solutions. To make the discussion more concrete, we illustrate the framework with a case study on an emergency scenario within a remote healthcare system.