relation: https://publications.ut-capitole.fr/id/eprint/27286/ title: Modelling and simulating a crisis management system creator: Chaawa, Mohamed creator: Hanachi, Chihab creator: Thabet, Inès creator: Ben Said, Lamjed subject: H- INFORMATIQUE description: Crises are complex situations due to the dynamism of the environment, its unpredictability and the complexity of the interactions among several different and autonomous involved organisations. In such a context, establishing an organisational view as well as structuring organisations’ communications and their functioning is a crucial requirement. In this article, we propose a multi-agent organisational model (OM) to abstract, simulate and analyse a crisis management system (CMS). The objective is to evaluate the CMS from an organisational view, to assess its strength as well as its weakness and to provide deciders with some recommendations for a more flexible and reactive CMS. The proposed OM is illustrated through a real case study: a snowstorm in a Tunisian region. More precisely, we made the following contribution: firstly, we provide an environmental model that identifies the concepts involved in the crisis. Then, we define a role model that copes with the involved actors. In addition, we specify the organisational structure and the interaction model that rule communications and structure actors’ functioning. Those models, built following the GAIA methodology, abstract the CMS from an organisational perspective. Finally, we implemented a customisable multi-agent simulator based on the Janus platform to analyse, through several performed simulations, the organisational model. publisher: Taylor & Francis date: 2017-07-25 type: Article type: PeerReviewed identifier: Chaawa, Mohamed, Hanachi, Chihab , Thabet, Inès and Ben Said, Lamjed (2017) Modelling and simulating a crisis management system: an organisational perspective. Enterprise Information Systems, vol. 11 (n° 4). pp. 534-550. relation: 10.1080/17517575.2016.1212275 identifier: 10.1080/17517575.2016.1212275 doi: 10.1080/17517575.2016.1212275 language: en