Usefulness of Planning Support Systems : Conceptual perspectives and practitioners' experiences
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This dissertation starts by observing (Chapter 1) that the question of supporting
planning and policy making with dedicated information is an old and important
one. In the end of the 1980s a research field emerges dedicated
to specifically cater instruments to the needs of practitioners, so called
Planning Support Systems (PSS). PSS can be defined as ‘geo-information based
instruments that incorporate a suite of components that collectively
support some parts of a unique professional planning task’. PSS is often
software, which supports understanding and evaluating planning decisions.
While the instrumental characteristics of PSS have improved significantly over
the last two decades, this has not resulted in intensive usage in planning and
policy practice. Earlier research has shed light on the bottlenecks preventing
this higher frequency of usage. It has hardly been studied, however, what it
means for planning practice if a PSS is indeed used.
How can the usefulness of Planning Support Systems for planning practice be
conceptualized and how do practitioners experience this?
The following six chapters answer different aspects of this research question.
Chapter 2 has a chiefly conceptual focus. It emphasizes the collaborative and
communicative nature of contemporary planning, whereas PSS traditionally
come from a scientific-analytical approach to planning. This chapter argues
that a better role of PSS can particularly be found in a careful conceptualization
of knowledge.The role of PSS in planning particularly lies in gathering and testing the knowledge claims that are brought forward by different stakeholders.
Chapter 3 and Chapter 4 report about the added value of PSS applications as
perceived by practitioners. A conceptual framework is developed, in which
added value is measured on the individual, group and outcome level. In a Group Decision Room
workshop particularly communication and collaboration are emphasized
as important added values of PSS.The questionnaires indicate that
particularly learning is as an important
added value of PSS.
Chapter 5 focuses in detail on interdisciplinary learning (part of of learning
about others), which is conceived as ‘frame reflection’ by stakeholders three disciplinary frames about planning and PSS: an analytic frame, a design frame, and a negotiation frame. The two case studies reveal that a PSS can both have a positive and a negative effect on interdisciplinary communication.
Chapter 6 and Chapter 7 focus on the planning tasks that are supported by the
application of the PSS. In both chapters the concept of task-technology fit is
used, which refers to the extent to which the support capabilities of a PSS (i.e.
the ‘technology’) influence the extent to which planning tasks are successfully
conducted. The findings indicate that a PSS is particularly useful when applied selectively.
In the conclusion (Chapter 8) the overarching finding is discussed that PSS are to be particularly useful when applied selectively. Facilitation could play a key role in achieving this.
In future research it is important that the perspective of
practitioners is kept in mind, particularly since the recent attention for smart cities and big data tends to have a chiefly technological focus.