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Essential Layers, Artifacts, and Dependencies of Enterprise Architecture
Hong Kong, China October 16-October 20
DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/EDOCW.2006.3310th IEEE International Enterprise Di ...
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Robert Winter, Institute of Information Management, University of St. Gallen
Ronny Fischer, Institute of Information Management, University of St. Gallen
After a period where implementation speed was more important than integration, consistency and reduction of complexity, architectural considerations have become a key issue of information management in recent years again. Enterprise architecture is widely accepted as an essential mechanism for ensuring agility and consistency, compliance and efficiency. Although standards like TOGAF and FEAF have developed, however, there is no common agreement on which architecture layers, which artifact types and which dependencies constitute the essence of enterprise architecture. This paper contributes to the identification of essential elements of enterprise architecture by (1) specifying enterprise architecture as a hierarchical, multilevel system comprising aggregation hierarchies, architecture layers and views, (2) discussing enterprise architecture frameworks with regard to essential elements, (3) proposing interfacing requirements of enterprise architecture with other architecture models and (4) matching these findings with current enterprise architecture practice in several large companies.
Citation:
Robert Winter, Ronny Fischer, "Essential Layers, Artifacts, and Dependencies of Enterprise Architecture," edocw, pp.30, 10th IEEE International Enterprise Distributed Object Computing Conference Workshops (EDOCW'06), 2006
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