Information systems definition: the Multiview approach
Information systems definition: the Multiview approach
Systems theory and information systems
Trends in information systems
Soft systems methodology in action
Soft systems methodology in action
Structured systems analysis and design method (2nd ed.): application and context
Structured systems analysis and design method (2nd ed.): application and context
Steps toward a partnership: ethnography and system design
Requirements engineering
Transforming work: collaboration, learning, and design
Communications of the ACM
How we profess: the ethical systems analyst
Communications of the ACM
Communications of the ACM
Managers Divided: Organisation Politics and Information Technology Management
Managers Divided: Organisation Politics and Information Technology Management
Prototyping: An Approach to Evolutionary System Development
Prototyping: An Approach to Evolutionary System Development
Informative global community development index of intelligent city
WSEAS Transactions on Information Science and Applications
The Shadow of ECM: The Hidden Side of Decision Processes
Proceedings of the 2010 conference on Bridging the Socio-technical Gap in Decision Support Systems: Challenges for the Next Decade
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Multiview is a framework to support the information systems development process. It was formulated originally in 1985, but has been developed and changed since that time. It was originally defined to take into account the human and organisational aspects of information systems development, as the alternative methodologies of the time-and most since that time-took a very technology-oriented approach. Furthermore, it is a contingency approach, and again this compares with the alternative bureaucratic and prescriptive methodologies. In this chapter, we describe the history of Multiview, and we reflect on the experiences of using it in action in many organisations.