Problem

Organizational hierarchy is a common source of both authority and access privilege, and is frequently the basis for determining membership in groups and/or inclusion in distribution lists. Workgroups combine to form units which form divisions; departments combine to form schools and colleges. The authority and access afforded individuals is often scoped based on organizational hierarchy (eg., a department head may have privileges scoped to cover all faculty in the department, while dean may have the same privileges, but scoped to cover all faculty within the departments comprised by an entire school). In the electronic world, systems that manage or use access privileges need to reflect real-world organizational hierarchies.

Blended Hierarchies

A variation on this basic problem often occurs in Higher Ed environments -- the hierarchy of the organization does not fully match the access control requirements of a system or a set of data; minor adjustments of the group membership are required. The official hierarchy is often a representation derived from HR/finance systems. This hierarchy is more representative of financial and line management concerns than it is of how other functions such as research and teaching is organized and structured.  While this official hierarchy is often the best available representation, it often requires some adjusting to make it useful for representing the research or teaching structure. A blended hierarchy builds on an official hierarchy with some adjustments made so that it represents the actual access control needs of the application.

Blended requirements often arise in administrative applications when rosters are derived from payroll systems. Individuals may have authority or membership in campus departments, centers, and institutes that are not their primary funding source. Blended requirements arise most often, however, in the instructional and research space, where the central business systems have no interest in tracking the detailed role information instructors want to apply to systems supporting instruction.

Solution

Examples

A research group is often largely based in an organisational unit as represented by the organizational hierarchy however it will often include additional members from other parts of the organization. For instance a research group studying biomaterails will draw it's membership from the biomaterials research group but may also include members from the chemistry or physics department.

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