We reconstruct Cohen, March and Olsen’s Garbage Can model of organiza-tional choice as an agent-based model. In the original model, the members of an organization can postpone decision-making. We add another means for avoiding making decisions, that of buck-passing difficult problems to colleagues. We find that selfish individual behavior, such as postponing decision-making and buck-passing, does not necessarily imply dysfunctional consequences for the organiza-tional level. The simulation experiments confirm and extend some of the most interesting conclusions of the Garbage Can model: Most decisions are made without solving any problem, organization members face the same old problems again and again, and the few problems that are solved ar...
Das Verstaendnis von Entscheidungsprozessen in Organisationen ist ein wichtiger Schritt zum Verstaen...
As a rule-following organization, the military both suffers and benefits from bureaucracy. One of th...
Empirical studies of decision making find that the process is more disorderly than described in rati...
We reconstruct Cohen, March and Olsen's Garbage Can model of organizational choice as an agent-base...
We reconstruct Cohen, March and Olsen's Garbage Can model of organizational choice as an agent-base...
We reconstruct Cohen, March and Olsen's original Garbage can model of organizational choice as a mul...
Cohen, March and Olsen's Garbage Can Model (GCM) of organizational choice represent perhaps the firs...
This chapter reconstructs the garbage can model (GCM) of organizational choice as an agent-based mod...
The Garbage Can Model of Organizational Choice (GCM) is a fundamental model of organizational decisi...
This project has sought new insights from the Garbage Can Model of Organizational Choice, developed ...
Büchner S. Cohen, Michael D.; March, James D., Olsen, Johan P. (1972): A Garbage Can Model of Organi...
We develop an experimental setting where the assumptions and predictions of the garbage can model ca...
The usual frameworks applied to the analysis of military decision making describe the decision proce...
In this paper the effects of planning on complex decisionmaking processes are explored. Planning is ...
The Garbage Can Model (GCM) has been used to study behavioral aspects of organizations and has been ...
Das Verstaendnis von Entscheidungsprozessen in Organisationen ist ein wichtiger Schritt zum Verstaen...
As a rule-following organization, the military both suffers and benefits from bureaucracy. One of th...
Empirical studies of decision making find that the process is more disorderly than described in rati...
We reconstruct Cohen, March and Olsen's Garbage Can model of organizational choice as an agent-base...
We reconstruct Cohen, March and Olsen's Garbage Can model of organizational choice as an agent-base...
We reconstruct Cohen, March and Olsen's original Garbage can model of organizational choice as a mul...
Cohen, March and Olsen's Garbage Can Model (GCM) of organizational choice represent perhaps the firs...
This chapter reconstructs the garbage can model (GCM) of organizational choice as an agent-based mod...
The Garbage Can Model of Organizational Choice (GCM) is a fundamental model of organizational decisi...
This project has sought new insights from the Garbage Can Model of Organizational Choice, developed ...
Büchner S. Cohen, Michael D.; March, James D., Olsen, Johan P. (1972): A Garbage Can Model of Organi...
We develop an experimental setting where the assumptions and predictions of the garbage can model ca...
The usual frameworks applied to the analysis of military decision making describe the decision proce...
In this paper the effects of planning on complex decisionmaking processes are explored. Planning is ...
The Garbage Can Model (GCM) has been used to study behavioral aspects of organizations and has been ...
Das Verstaendnis von Entscheidungsprozessen in Organisationen ist ein wichtiger Schritt zum Verstaen...
As a rule-following organization, the military both suffers and benefits from bureaucracy. One of th...
Empirical studies of decision making find that the process is more disorderly than described in rati...