The cultural political economy of megaprojects: Governmentality and the social realm of client decision-making

Date

2011

Authors

Siva, P.S.
London, K.

Editors

Otter, A.
Emmitt, S.
Achammer, C.

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Conference paper

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Proceedings Architectural Management in the Digital Arena, 2011 / Otter, A., Emmitt, S., Achammer, C. (ed./s), pp.171-183

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CIBW096 Architectural Management in the Digital Arena (13 Oct 2011 - 14 Oct 2011 : Vienna, Austria)

Abstract

In recent years the landscape for international design management has been fast changing and a key development, which has led to this, has been the unprecedented advances in digital technologies. Firms in the architectural, engineering and construction (AEC) sector are no longer constrained to working on domestic projects but now operate on a global scale. The rise of globalisation has not been without problems and in particular project challenges related to technological and social complexity, strategic behaviour, contested information and cost overruns are prominent. Effective design management and project success is significantly impacted by the internal workings of clients and its relationship with project decision-making which is often beyond the control of project teams. Yet the focus of past megaproject and design management research has tended to be on the industry's role instead of the client's. In their role as project initiators and financiers, clients are the driving political force on projects, occupying a central position within the power structure embedded on megaprojects. This paper is positioned within a PhD study which seeks to offer a theoretical contribution to the design management field by examining the governance context of megaprojects with a focus on the critical role of the client. There has been little research investigating the sophistication of the international client and their capacity to contribute to project success in relation to sound decision making regardless of the political environment.

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Copyright 2011 The Authors

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