3.8 Article

Emergent Conditions and Multiple Criteria Analysis in Infrastructure Prioritization for Developing Countries

Journal

JOURNAL OF MULTI-CRITERIA DECISION ANALYSIS
Volume 16, Issue 5-6, Pages 125-137

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/mcda.444

Keywords

emergent conditions; scenario analysis; contingency analysis; infrastructure prioritization; group negotiation

Categories

Funding

  1. US Army Corps of Engineers Civil Works Basic Research Program
  2. Business Transformation Agency of the US Department of Defense
  3. USACE Chief of Engineers

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With coordinated military and civil operations in developing countries, the integration of local stakeholder values with the goals of security and nation building is crucial. Such integration encourages innovative and effective courses of action and prioritization of resources. Although tools of multi-criteria decision analysis are well suited for resource prioritization, designing practical stakeholder value judgment elicitation in developing countries is a challenge because of cultural, organizational, and other barriers. Specifically, the weight of individual decision criteria can increase or decrease when diverse scenarios of emergent conditions are introduced or advocated by various stakeholders. This article develops methodology to identify the most important emergent conditions for infrastructure planning among a set of scenarios involving military and civil stakeholders. Across the infrastructure development alternatives, we identify scenarios that represent opportunities and those that represent threats. We adapt the framework of the swing weighting method for recalibration of a baseline value function with a variety of assumptions of scenarios, where each scenario is composed of one or more emergent conditions. The approach reduces the typical demand on stakeholders for elicitation of preference weights, as the entire value function is not entirely reconstructed per scenario. The approach and methodology were tested in a strategy workshop with more than 50 international participants and presented to ministry officials in a developing country. The testing integrated political, economic, environmental, and technology emergent conditions for prioritizing among infrastructure projects. Copyright (C) 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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