Structured Dialogic Design Process

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The Structured Democratic Dialogue Process, also referred to as Structured Design Process, is an implementation of a Co-Laboratory in strict compliance with the Foundational Axioms and Laws of Dialogic Design Science.


The Broker makes the first move

Setting up a Knowledge Management Team

Formulating the Triggering Question

Selecting the appropriate stakeholders

The KMT is responsible for choosing the minimum number of individuals who represent the maximum possible variety of stakeholders. The Law of Requisite Variety demands that the variety of those participating should be equal to the variety that exists in the real-world system. In simple terms, those invited to join a dialogue must represent all possible diverse and or conflicting points of view, opinions, or interests. A stakeholder is defined as any entity that has a stake in any potential changes to the system; i.e., those whose lives will be influenced by any changes in the system. These include non-human entities such as animals and the environment at large. The interests of the latter could be represented by people who work for relevant NGOs or other analogous organizations.


Logo.



External links