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Assessing the quality of the ‘TurnStormer’ thinkLet as a collaboration engineering building block for the implementation of the promotion of Administrative Justice Act of South Africa

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dc.contributor.author Phahlamohlaka, Letlibe J
dc.contributor.author Twinomurinzi, V
dc.contributor.author Ojo, R
dc.contributor.author Mahlangu, Z
dc.contributor.author Masanabo, L
dc.date.accessioned 2008-10-24T08:24:35Z
dc.date.available 2008-10-24T08:24:35Z
dc.date.issued 2008-09
dc.identifier.citation Phahlamohlaka, J, Twinomurinzi, V et al. 2008. Assessing the quality of the ‘TurnStormer’ thinkLet as a collaboration engineering building block for the implementation of the promotion of Administrative Justice Act of South Africa. Workshop of the International Federation for Information Processing (IFIP) Working Group: Towards an ICT Research Agenda for African Development. Pretoria, South Africa, 23-24 September 2008, pp 295 en
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10204/2501
dc.description Workshop of the International Federation for Information Processing (IFIP) Working Group: Towards an ICT Research Agenda for African Development, 2008 en
dc.description.abstract This paper assesses the quality of the TurnStormer thinkLet as a building block for Collaboration Engineering for the Implementation of the Administrative Justice Act of South Africa. Although a complete research paper on its own, it constitutes a milestone in an ongoing exploratory study that commenced in 2005 and is to end in 2010. An assessment framework of the study as a whole was declared at its outset as being guided by the critical appraisal guidelines developed by Atkins and Sampson. However, the creation of the first thinkLet of the study in 2006, the TurnStormer thinkLet, required that it be assessed following some Collaboration Engineering design standards. Such standards were not available yet in the literature, but a completed doctoral study by Kolfschoten in December 2007 crystallised them and they are used in this paper to assess the quality of the designed TurnStormer ThinkLet as a Collaboration Engineering building block. The analysis shows that the TurnStormer thinkLet meets four of the five dimensions of quality of collaboration process design for Collaboration Engineering en
dc.language.iso en en
dc.subject TurnStormer en
dc.subject ThinkLet en
dc.subject Administrative Justice Act en
dc.title Assessing the quality of the ‘TurnStormer’ thinkLet as a collaboration engineering building block for the implementation of the promotion of Administrative Justice Act of South Africa en
dc.type Conference Presentation en
dc.identifier.apacitation Phahlamohlaka, L. J., Twinomurinzi, V., Ojo, R., Mahlangu, Z., & Masanabo, L. (2008). Assessing the quality of the ‘TurnStormer’ thinkLet as a collaboration engineering building block for the implementation of the promotion of Administrative Justice Act of South Africa. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/2501 en_ZA
dc.identifier.chicagocitation Phahlamohlaka, Letlibe J, V Twinomurinzi, R Ojo, Z Mahlangu, and L Masanabo. "Assessing the quality of the ‘TurnStormer’ thinkLet as a collaboration engineering building block for the implementation of the promotion of Administrative Justice Act of South Africa." (2008): http://hdl.handle.net/10204/2501 en_ZA
dc.identifier.vancouvercitation Phahlamohlaka LJ, Twinomurinzi V, Ojo R, Mahlangu Z, Masanabo L, Assessing the quality of the ‘TurnStormer’ thinkLet as a collaboration engineering building block for the implementation of the promotion of Administrative Justice Act of South Africa; 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/2501 . en_ZA
dc.identifier.ris TY - Conference Presentation AU - Phahlamohlaka, Letlibe J AU - Twinomurinzi, V AU - Ojo, R AU - Mahlangu, Z AU - Masanabo, L AB - This paper assesses the quality of the TurnStormer thinkLet as a building block for Collaboration Engineering for the Implementation of the Administrative Justice Act of South Africa. Although a complete research paper on its own, it constitutes a milestone in an ongoing exploratory study that commenced in 2005 and is to end in 2010. An assessment framework of the study as a whole was declared at its outset as being guided by the critical appraisal guidelines developed by Atkins and Sampson. However, the creation of the first thinkLet of the study in 2006, the TurnStormer thinkLet, required that it be assessed following some Collaboration Engineering design standards. Such standards were not available yet in the literature, but a completed doctoral study by Kolfschoten in December 2007 crystallised them and they are used in this paper to assess the quality of the designed TurnStormer ThinkLet as a Collaboration Engineering building block. The analysis shows that the TurnStormer thinkLet meets four of the five dimensions of quality of collaboration process design for Collaboration Engineering DA - 2008-09 DB - ResearchSpace DP - CSIR KW - TurnStormer KW - ThinkLet KW - Administrative Justice Act LK - https://researchspace.csir.co.za PY - 2008 T1 - Assessing the quality of the ‘TurnStormer’ thinkLet as a collaboration engineering building block for the implementation of the promotion of Administrative Justice Act of South Africa TI - Assessing the quality of the ‘TurnStormer’ thinkLet as a collaboration engineering building block for the implementation of the promotion of Administrative Justice Act of South Africa UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10204/2501 ER - en_ZA


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