A systems approach to forensic science applied in the military domain |
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Authors: | L. E. Wilson M. E. Gahan C. Lennard J. Robertson |
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Affiliation: | 1. Australian Defence Collage, the Australian Government Department of Defence, Canberra, Australia;2. National Centre for Forensic Studies (NCFS), Faculty of Education, Science, Technology and Mathematics (ESTeM), University of Canberra, Canberra, Australia;3. National Centre for Forensic Studies (NCFS), Faculty of Education, Science, Technology and Mathematics (ESTeM), University of Canberra, Canberra, Australia;4. School of Science and Health, Western Sydney University, Sydney, Australia |
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Abstract: | Forensic science is undertaken in support of law enforcement investigations, criminal justice prosecutions, intelligence, and military objectives. There are different forensic operating models to meet these various objectives and no unified approach to forensic science has been described. There are common challenges in the military domain, which impacts the delivery of forensic science, including: different terminology between organizations, complex operating environments, operating siloes, inward-looking military structures, quality management, and resource constraints. One solution to these challenges is to apply modern organizational theory to military-focused forensic science. Organizational theory is the study of organizations in a structural sense, including objectives, people, structure and management. The modern organizational theory systems approach describes how organizations should be viewed as systems within larger systems. In the work presented in this paper, a systems approach has been applied, for the first time, to military forensic exploitation to address the common issues faced by military organizations. The advantages of applying a systems approach to military forensic exploitation are that it is applicable across forensic science organizations, it is flexible and scalable to meet the changing external environment, and it articulates the redundancies in the system to help address system failures. |
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Keywords: | Exploitation organizational theory systems approach system of systems quality management systems system failure |
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