A platform for research: civil engineering, architecture and urbanism
USNORTHCOM Integrated Architecture: Developing and Managing a Capabilities-Based Architecture as a Program to Enhance the Homeland Defense and Military Assistance to Civil Authorities Mission Areas
The United States Northern Command (USNORTHCOM) Integrated Architecture is a capabilities-based methodology, grounded in the two missions of the command: Homeland Defense (HLD) and Military Assistance to Civil Authorities (MACA). USNORTHCOM has identified 17 critical warfighting capabilities and 13 Joint Mission Essential Tasks (JMETS) that enable those capabilities. The command architecture provides a means of describing and assessing/analyzing the infrastructure, personnel, and organization to perform those tasks. This approach requires a collaborative process that utilizes an integrated, capabilities-based architecture to identify prioritized capability requirements, gaps and shortfalls, and integrated doctrine, organization, training, materiel, leadership and education, personnel, and facilities (DOTMLPF) solutions. Gaps in command capabilities, operational requirements, and associated risks are identified via analysis between the As-Is and To-Be architectures. Time-phased capabilities are illustrated in the transition and sequencing plans. The architecture process has several key touchpoints to other USNORTHCOM processes and functions, namely, the IT investment management, resource allocation, and capabilities-based acquisition processes. The USNORTHCOM Chief Architect manages the development and maintenance of the command's architecture as a program, structuring the office as a program management office (PMO). Lastly, the paper delineates the triad of capabilities- based architecture, investment management decision support, and implementation.
USNORTHCOM Integrated Architecture: Developing and Managing a Capabilities-Based Architecture as a Program to Enhance the Homeland Defense and Military Assistance to Civil Authorities Mission Areas
The United States Northern Command (USNORTHCOM) Integrated Architecture is a capabilities-based methodology, grounded in the two missions of the command: Homeland Defense (HLD) and Military Assistance to Civil Authorities (MACA). USNORTHCOM has identified 17 critical warfighting capabilities and 13 Joint Mission Essential Tasks (JMETS) that enable those capabilities. The command architecture provides a means of describing and assessing/analyzing the infrastructure, personnel, and organization to perform those tasks. This approach requires a collaborative process that utilizes an integrated, capabilities-based architecture to identify prioritized capability requirements, gaps and shortfalls, and integrated doctrine, organization, training, materiel, leadership and education, personnel, and facilities (DOTMLPF) solutions. Gaps in command capabilities, operational requirements, and associated risks are identified via analysis between the As-Is and To-Be architectures. Time-phased capabilities are illustrated in the transition and sequencing plans. The architecture process has several key touchpoints to other USNORTHCOM processes and functions, namely, the IT investment management, resource allocation, and capabilities-based acquisition processes. The USNORTHCOM Chief Architect manages the development and maintenance of the command's architecture as a program, structuring the office as a program management office (PMO). Lastly, the paper delineates the triad of capabilities- based architecture, investment management decision support, and implementation.
USNORTHCOM Integrated Architecture: Developing and Managing a Capabilities-Based Architecture as a Program to Enhance the Homeland Defense and Military Assistance to Civil Authorities Mission Areas
R. A. Beamer (author) / P. Henning (author) / R. Cullen (author)
2006
15 pages
Report
No indication
English
Management Information Systems , Information Systems , Computers, Control & Information Theory , Common Carrier & Satellite , Operations Research , Military Sciences , Emergency Services & Planning , Operational effectiveness , Corporate information management , Network analysis(Management) , Decision support systems , Measures of effectiveness , Enterprise architecture , Architecture development , Mission- centric functional assessment , Cardss(Commands architecture repository and decision support source)