The IRG Solution is a book written by David Andrews and published in 1984.
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The book, written in 1984,[1] developed from a number of research papers at the Open University Energy Research Group, and an article appearing in the Guardian Newspaper which attempted an information- and communication-based approach to analyzing why things often went wrong (ie inadequate policy responses with counter productive unintended consequences) in centrally governed societies equipped with hierarchic bureaucratic organizations (governments) and what the book called “central media” – ie print, and broadcast media,[2] and predicted that a general environmental / energy / pollution / food catastrophe would inevitably ensue from these features alone, unless the mechanisms at work were recognized and appropriate information-based solutions devised (as defined in the book) and implemented. It was argued that home computers and modems could be harnessed to create lateral media,[3] or interactive computer-based social networks (essentially the internet as we know it today) as the only form of media which would adequately understand and describe the complexity of the emerging environmental, energy and water crises the author claimed we were rapidly heading into.
One of the central claims in the book was that for millennia, all life had been controlled, organized and responded to by other organisms, species, and environmental issues on a lateral communication / dispersed control basis – communication and signalling between individual cells, bacteria, amoebae and species – all created via Collective intelligence to form self-sustaining, self-regulating ecosystems. Examples cited included “primitive” cultures with no king or power structure, slime moulds which are communities of individual amoebae but which can come together to form a single purposeful organism, a school of fish, a flock of birds, insect colonies, and the human body. All of these the book claims indicated a high degree of organization and co-ordination using lateral communication instead of central control, resulting in control being dispersed between the cells or individuals in the community.
The book claimed that environmental damage began to occur as soon as centralized control emerged, initially dynasties and monarchies using the tools of warfare, and then further centralization of communication with the advent of the printing press.
The book claimed that only by using technology to develop mass lateral media - the organised sending of messages between individuals - could we hope to recognize and solve our problems. The proposed necessary technology was the widespread use of computers in individuals' hands to mediate person-to-person communication on a mass scale, using modems and telephony at that time a relatively unfamiliar idea (it is being popularly reckoned that the internet was invented around 1990).
The book first described what were claimed to be the inherent deficiencies of hierarchies and central media - Hierarchical incompetence - and their alleged inability to recognize and deal with complex issues, and secondly to suggest the urgent development of what the book termed “lateral media” which were described in some detail and were what we would recognize today in may respects as “the internet” and social networking. The book proposed that we should develop a system where a PC in every home would be linked by modems and the telephone network and be equipped with software to enable messages, news and inquiries to be forwarded selectively to create a cloud of lateral communications hopping from computer to computer (similar to the way a flock of birds or shoal of fish communicated in order to stay in a coherent whole – this is similar to what we today call social networking / email and many other features of the internet but at the time these ideas were not widely considered.
The book cited the so called Small World problem as proof that such messages would diffuse to the appropriate people anywhere in the world between hierarchies without any central cataloging using informal self generating networks and the book’s central argument is that just as the technology of the printing press had amplified central communication, with many disastrous (it claimed) social and environmental side effects, so too should we apply technology (computers and email) to amplify the already existing but informal lateral communications - gossip, the grapevine, and other informal networks.
Such a network of interlocked “Information Routing Groups” the book claimed would be able to discuss and process information much more effectively than highly centralized media and hierarchies, "silos" which inevitably produced, it claimed, non-sustainable solutions to almost any problem for intrinsic and inherent reasons; the book went into some detail to describe why this was the case.
The book claimed that by diffusing information laterally between individuals knowledge of the true problems facing us and their solutions would automatically become apparent, these problems which the book claimed were due to a lack of integrated thinking between organizations and individual leading to narrow, partial world views and hence decisions.
It was argued that these lateral communication networks would form a dispersed control system able to truly map and respond to the complexity of the problem,
The book proposed a method of research / administration / policy formulation called “Interlock research” which was a formalized method of creating interpersonal networks and dialogues between specialist across whatever professional or hierarchical boundaries needed to be spanned.
This concept took in all the various ideas in the book, such as defeating the relevance paradox, spreading tacit knowledge, avoiding unintended consequences and so on.
The paper reviews developments in the USA & UK in recent years, progressing beyond network analysis to explore the structure & use of networks. The paper seeks to address questions of how to construct multi-actor policy structures, & build networks for particular purposes. Contributory concepts explored included the 'Reticulist', the 'Leader/Co- ordinator', the 'Segmented Polycephalous Network' & the 'Information Routing Group' in "CONNECTIONS", Sunbelt Social Network Conference, World Congress of Sociology, American Sociological Association, Volume IX, Nos. 2-3, Winter, 1986