Thesis Aniek Tuijtelaars

Subject: Information System Science

Title: Flexibility by Design: Information Technology Governance for Military Organisations

Abstract: 

Information Technology (IT) has evolved into a critical strategic enabler for modern military organisations, shifting from an administrative asset to a vital socio-technical component for operational effectiveness. However, existing IT Governance (ITG) frameworks are typically rooted in civilian corporate logic and exhibit a strong peacetime bias that assumes environmental stability and prioritises centralised control. When military organisations transition rapidly from stable peacetime routines to highly volatile peacekeeping or warfare scenarios, this structural rigidity creates a dangerous temporal gap. During this strategic delay, formal policies fail to align with dynamic battlefield realities, forcing the operational and tactical levels to bypass central governance and rely on fragmented, ad-hoc workarounds and shadow IT to maintain operational momentum and ensure mission success.

To address this friction, this study investigates how ITG can be dynamically tailored to the unique complexities of defence environments. The primary research question asks: “How can the operational level of a military organisation use IT governance to provide the required balance between flexibility and stability to support diverse operational scenarios?” The study employs a qualitative, embedded single case study approach within a military organisation. Utilising data triangulation, the research combined an analysis of internal policy documents with nine semistructured interviews conducted across the strategic, operational, and tactical hierarchy levels, distributed over four geographical locations.

The empirical findings reveal a profound socio-technical disconnect between administrative headquarters (white IT) and deployed combat units (green IT). The strategic unit suffers from operational blindness, while the tactical and operational units suffer from role ambiguity due to a lack of shared performance metrics and transparent vertical communication. The study concludes that military organisations should transition from monolithic compliance frameworks to a dual-operating hybrid model. This federal governance approach successfully resolves the temporal gap by enforcing strict, centralised stability for core infrastructure and cybersecurity, while simultaneously codifying explicit decentralised flexibility that legally empowers local commanders to adapt and innovate securely under operational pressure.

Keywords: Information Technology Governance (ITG), Military Operations, Tactical Level, Dual-Operating Hybrid Model, Federal Governance, Bimodal IT, Peacetime Bias, Temporal Gap, Flexibility and Stability.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *