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International Journal of Strategic Engineering (IJoSE)Open Access Journal

International Journal of Strategic Engineering (IJoSE)

Amin Hosseinian-Far (University of Hertfordshire, UK)
Published: Continuous Volume |Established: 2018 |Volumes: 6
ISSN: 2572-4959|EISSN: 2572-4967|DOI: 10.4018/IJoSE
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Hosseinian-Far, Amin. "International Journal of Strategic Engineering (IJoSE)." (2018). Web. 29 Apr. 2024. doi:10.4018/IJoSE

APA

Hosseinian-Far, A. (2018). International Journal of Strategic Engineering (IJoSE). doi:10.4018/IJoSE

Chicago

Hosseinian-Far, Amin. "International Journal of Strategic Engineering (IJoSE)," (2018), accessed (April 29, 2024), doi:10.4018/IJoSE

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The International Journal of Strategic Engineering (IJoSE) is an international scholarly peer-reviewed journal that aims to provide a platform for researchers, academics, practitioners and emerging scholars to share their invaluable knowledge and expertise on the continuous development within the field of Strategic Engineering. Endurance, resilience, reliability and sustainability of applied systems are all of great importance to many businesses and industries. Complexity however is considered as one of the main obstacles. Modeling and optimization are often seen as a good initial point to tackle the complications in understanding of such systems. Additionally, many end-users and sometimes other stakeholders become instantaneously supportive of the new disruptive technological innovations prior to undertaking comprehensive assessments. This initial interest in utilization and lack of thorough assessments of negative constructs, risks and post-implementation concerns can impose a negative impact on the same stakeholders. Strategic Engineering as a discipline attempts to explore, analyze and discuss numerous frameworks and approaches to the pre-implementation, implementation and post-implementation of engineering systems from a holistic strategic perspective.

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Volume years with an asterisk (*) after them are indicative of the continuous volume publication frequency conversion. Journals that have shifted to the continuous volume frequency are no longer publishing a set number of issues. All regular articles are published together, and special issue articles are separated into their own categories for organizational purposes.

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