Abstract
The past few years have seen a significant resurgence of interest in ‘management games’ and ‘management flight simulators’, one particularly active source of such work being the system dynamics community. After proposing a distinction between games and simulations, this paper provides some background to these developments by briefly describing the historical roots of the field and the fundamental ideas of the system dynamics community, which are now giving rise to ‘microworlds’. The training advantages of management simulations and games are then discussed. The paper closes with a note on the research and findings of the system dynamics field and by offering some words of warning on the perils of simulation and game use. Two scenarios for how the use of simulations and games as management education devices might develop in the future are proposed. An Appendix describes five examples of very different types of management simulations and games.
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This article is an expanded and amended version of a paper read by the author in the strategic planning stream of the Operational Research Society Conference, York, UK in September, 1993
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Lane, D. On a Resurgence of Management Simulations and Games. J Oper Res Soc 46, 604–625 (1995). https://doi.org/10.1057/jors.1995.86
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1057/jors.1995.86