TY - JOUR
T1 - The definition of alliancing in construction as a Wittgenstein family-resemblance concept
AU - Yeung, John F.Y.
AU - Chan, Albert P.C.
AU - Chan, Daniel W.M.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2006 Elsevier Ltd and IPMA. All rights reserved.
Funding Information:
The work described in this paper was fully supported by a grant from the Research Grants Council of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, China (RGC Project No. PolyU 5158/04E).
PY - 2007/4
Y1 - 2007/4
N2 - There has been increasing interest in the concept of alliancing in
construction stemming from the late 1990s. In spite of the fact that
project partnering is a widely understood concept, the same is not true
for alliancing. By using Nyström’s similar approach to define
construction partnering, this paper focuses on alliancing and
family-resemblance and makes two contributions to the concept of
alliancing in construction. The first one is to clearly distinguish
amongst general prerequisites, hard (contractual) and soft (relationship-based) elements, and goals
when discussing the concept. For the sake of thoroughly understanding
what is specific about alliancing, the focus ought to be on the hard (contractual) and soft (relationship-based) elements,
which are identified through a literature review. The second one is to
make use of the German philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein’s idea of
family-resemblance when defining the alliancing concept. His idea is
that a complicated concept can be understood as a network of overlapping
similarities. It is concluded, based on the literature review, that
there are two necessary hard (contractual) elements – formal contract and real gain-share/pain-share arrangement, and three essential soft (relationship-based) elements, trust, long-term commitment, and cooperation and communication
in construction alliancing, and that a number of different elements can
be added to constitute a specific variant of alliancing. This provides
an innovative and useful method to define the vague and versatile
concept of alliancing in construction in a flexible and structured way.
By doing so, industrial practitioners may find the alliancing sunflower
model useful in the procurement phase of a building and construction
project, particularly if needed, as a description of the concept and as a
common starting point for discussions between a client and a contractor
on how to procure a specific alliancing projects, thus avoiding any
misinterpretations of what an alliancing project is.
AB - There has been increasing interest in the concept of alliancing in
construction stemming from the late 1990s. In spite of the fact that
project partnering is a widely understood concept, the same is not true
for alliancing. By using Nyström’s similar approach to define
construction partnering, this paper focuses on alliancing and
family-resemblance and makes two contributions to the concept of
alliancing in construction. The first one is to clearly distinguish
amongst general prerequisites, hard (contractual) and soft (relationship-based) elements, and goals
when discussing the concept. For the sake of thoroughly understanding
what is specific about alliancing, the focus ought to be on the hard (contractual) and soft (relationship-based) elements,
which are identified through a literature review. The second one is to
make use of the German philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein’s idea of
family-resemblance when defining the alliancing concept. His idea is
that a complicated concept can be understood as a network of overlapping
similarities. It is concluded, based on the literature review, that
there are two necessary hard (contractual) elements – formal contract and real gain-share/pain-share arrangement, and three essential soft (relationship-based) elements, trust, long-term commitment, and cooperation and communication
in construction alliancing, and that a number of different elements can
be added to constitute a specific variant of alliancing. This provides
an innovative and useful method to define the vague and versatile
concept of alliancing in construction in a flexible and structured way.
By doing so, industrial practitioners may find the alliancing sunflower
model useful in the procurement phase of a building and construction
project, particularly if needed, as a description of the concept and as a
common starting point for discussions between a client and a contractor
on how to procure a specific alliancing projects, thus avoiding any
misinterpretations of what an alliancing project is.
KW - Alliancing
KW - Family-resemblance
KW - Construction
KW - Hard (contractual) and soft (relationship-based) elements
KW - Wittgenstein
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=33847258793&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.ijproman.2006.10.003
DO - 10.1016/j.ijproman.2006.10.003
M3 - Journal article
AN - SCOPUS:33847258793
SN - 0263-7863
VL - 25
SP - 219
EP - 231
JO - International Journal of Project Management
JF - International Journal of Project Management
IS - 3
ER -