Project Management Practices in Complex Systems: A Comprehensive Review
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Abstract
Managing projects in complex systems presents unique challenges due to uncertainty, interdependencies, nonlinearity, and emergent behavior. Traditional project management approaches often fail to address the dynamic nature of complex systems, prompting the need for adaptive, iterative, and resilience-focused strategies. This paper investigates project management practices suited to complex environments, drawing from 25 academic sources across systems theory, complexity science, and project management research. The study examines methodologies such as adaptive project management, agile frameworks, systems thinking, complexity-informed governance, stakeholder co-creation, and knowledge integration. A comparative table highlights differences between traditional and complexity-based project management approaches. The analysis demonstrates that successful management in complex systems requires iterative planning, decentralized decision-making, continuous learning, early stakeholder engagement, and dynamic risk management. The discussion synthesizes theoretical and practical insights, and the conclusion emphasizes the need for flexible, learning-oriented models to manage complexity in modern project environments.
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