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Safety enterprise architecture approach for a railway safety management system
Published in Stein Haugen, Anne Barros, Coen van Gulijk, Trond Kongsvik, Jan Erik Vinnem, Safety and Reliability – Safe Societies in a Changing World, 2018
The question deals with the already established EA frameworks in various categories. These include Zachman from commercial frameworks, Open Group Architecture Framework (TOGAF) from open group frameworks, FEAF from government frameworks and Department of Defense Framework (DODAF) from defense frameworks (Jacco 2014, Nikpay et al, 2017). TOGAF is capable to be used as a general framework in any enterprise with modifications and therefore replaces GERAM and RM-ODP in that category. FEAF is the complete methodology with ZF-like classification and TOGAF like structural design process and excels over the TEAF in the federally developed frameworks category (Tang et al, 2004). DoDAF version 2.0 is an evolution of the C4ISR and NATO framework due to a limited application was dropped and replaced by DODAF.
Moving Enterprise Architecture from Professional Certificates to Academic Credentials
Published in Ibrahiem M. M. El Emary, Anna Brzozowska, Shaping the Future of ICT, 2017
Organizations in different disciplines started to look for standard ways to support describing and documenting their processes and systems using EA frameworks such as TOGAF, Zachman, Federal Enterprise Architecture Framework (FEAF), and Treasury Enterprise Architecture Framework (TEAF). An architecture is a framework of principles, guidelines, standards, models, and strategies that direct the design, construction, and deployment of business processes, resources, and information technology throughout the enterprise. Architectures are usually high-level views of the system they describe. An architecture is typically made up of A picture of the current stateA blueprint or vision for the futureA roadmap on how to get there
Integration of Business Process Architectures within Enterprise Architecture Approaches: A Literature Review
Published in Engineering Management Journal, 2019
Fernanda Gonzalez-Lopez, Guillermo Bustos
The Zachman framework (Zachman, 1987) was originally conceived as an Information System Architecture framework. It served as the first comprehensive EA framework (Lankhorst, 2009) and has influenced a number of different frameworks and writings on the topic (Bernard, 2012), for example, the Zachman’s Institute for Framework Architecture (ZIFA, 2001), the Federal Enterprise Architecture Framework (FEAF) (CCIO, 1999), the Treasury Enterprise Architecture Framework (TEAF) (US Department of the Treasury Chief Information Officer Council, 2000), and the work by Pereira and Sousa (2004).