Participatory Design of Participatory Systems for Sustainable Collaboration: Exploring Its Potential in Transport and Logistics

P.H.G. van Langen, Gerdje Pijper, P. de Vries, F.M. Brazier

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleScientificpeer-review

47 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Challenges involving economic, environmental, and societal aspects necessitate organisations in business networks to collaborate. The scientific problem central to this paper is the difficulty of building sustainable collaborations. The research question is how to support organisations in building sustainable collaborations in their business relationships. This paper presents a new socio-technical approach to this end, i.e., PDPS (an acronym for Participatory Design of Participatory Systems) and explores its potential in a case study. PDPS is a value-based approach to the participatory design of participatory systems. Such socio-technical systems enable people working in different disciplines, departments, and organisational levels to create sustainable relationships supported by distributed information and communication technology. In a participatory system, participants gain trust, engagement, and empowerment to self-organise actions that produce results they could not have achieved alone. Following PDPS, participants collectively explore challenges in their relationship, define a joint value-based mission, and create a continuous process of self-organisation to fulfil this mission. In a case study, PDPS supported two Dutch business partners in solving recurring transport and logistics issues in retail store refurbishment projects. Turning their traditional business processes into participatory ones led to new solutions for sustainable transport and logistics, more joint business, and more profit. PDPS differs from other approaches in its involvement of all participants in a business relationship, its focus on shared values, and its capacity for creating a continuous process of self-organisation to fulfil a joint mission. This paper may support researchers, practitioners, and organisational policymakers interested in building sustainable collaborations in business networks.
Original languageEnglish
Article number7966
JournalSustainability
Volume15
Issue number10
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2023

Keywords

  • business network
  • collaboration
  • complex systems
  • design thinking
  • participatory design
  • self-organisation
  • sustainability
  • systems thinking
  • value-sensitive design

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Participatory Design of Participatory Systems for Sustainable Collaboration: Exploring Its Potential in Transport and Logistics'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this