Agapow, "Analysis of Scenarios"
Notable for examining the relationships among stakeholders
SOURCE FOR THE PROCEDURE
Agapow, Paul-Michael. "Analysis of Scenarios." 1998. http://www.cs.latrobe.edu.au/~agapow/Teaching/Cs292/pd.week.6.html (10 Jun. 1999).
THE PROCEDURE ITSELF
- Identify the parties
- Who are the the people or groups involved?
- What is their position and relationship with each other?
- Briefly list the relevant facts.
- Define the dilemma.
- Was it right for ...?
- What should X do?
- Formulate the options.
- Remember to present all the options, including ones you disagree with or will later dismiss.
- State the ethical context for the option.
- State the option itself.
- Highlight the values (principles, rights).
- What values create the dilemma?
- What values will we use to choose between options?
- Prioritize values, select option, give rationale.
- Weigh up conflicting values (if there are any).
- Decide which ones get precedence.
- Choose an option from those given above.
- Explain why you chose that one and not another.
WALT'S CHECKLIST
The same checklist was applied to all procedures.
- This method is most useful when the DECISION-MAKER ...
- has plenty of time for investigation and analysis [step 4a]
- is skilled in conflict- or dilemma-resolution methods [steps 5 and 6a]
- This method is most useful in a SITUATION ...
- that will change little over time
- This method is most useful when STAKEHOLDERS ...
- share ethical principles [step 5]
- share values [step 5]