Milan Zeleny (Czech: Milan Zelený; January 22, 1942 – December 24, 2023) was a Czech-American economist, a professor of management systems at Fordham University,[1]New York City. He has done research in the field of decision-making, productivity, knowledge management, and business economics.[2]
Zeleny was also a visiting professor at the Tomas Bata University in Zlín, Czech Republic, and has been academic vice dean and professor at Xidian University in Xi’an, China. He was a distinguished visiting professor at Fu Jen Catholic University in Taipei in 2006, at the Indian Institute of Technology in Kanpur in 2007, and at IBMEC in Rio de Janeiro in 2009–10. For many years he has lectured at the Faculty of Architecture, University of Naples.[3]
Academic focus
Zeleny's research focus is multidisciplinary and systems oriented, exploring the interfaces of a number of disciplines, especially economics, business, systems science and socio-biological autopoiesis. Among his contributions are the concepts of Multiple Criteria Decision Making (MCDM),[4]Knowledge management,[5] De Novo Programming,[6][7] Tradeoffs-free Economics,[8] Social Autopoiesis, Economic Transformation,[9] Technology Support Network, Reintegration of Labor, Systems Self-sustainability and Economic Relocalization.
In Zeleny's book, Human Systems Management: Integrating Knowledge, Management and Systems, World Scientific, 2005 (reprint 2008), he summarizes knowledge as purposeful coordination of action and its implications for the global economics and management. Zeleny also indicates how the sector evolution from agriculture, industry, services and government leads to self-service and disintermediation, the first manifestations of the transformation in economics, which refers to the long-term movement from globalization to the relocalization of economic activities and mass customization of global market.
According to Hirsch Citation and Publication Index, Zeleny was the most cited Czech economist as of 2005.[citation needed][10] Since 1992, Zeleny constantly appears in the listings of Who's Who in Science and Engineering,[11]Who's Who in America (also in the East, in the World and of Professionals).
Personal life
Zeleny was born on January 22, 1942, in a small village of Klucké Chvalovice in Bohemia. He came from the literary family of Vácslav and Vladivoj Zelený. His father, Josef Zelený, founded one of the first organizational consulting firms in the 1930s and 1940s in Prague ("ZET-organizace"). After the communist takeover in 1948, his father became a coal miner (in Kladno) and his uncle worked in the uranium mines of Jáchymov. After studies at the University of Economics, Prague (1959–1964), military service in Prague, and a few years at the Czech Academy of Sciences, he left the communist Czechoslovakia in 1967 to expand his education for Ph.D. in Operations Research and Business Economics at the University of Rochester, where he also received his M.S. in Systems Management in 1970.
In 2012, he declared his intention to run for presidency of the Czech Republic, but then withdrew from the presidential election race.[12] He was a resident of Tenafly, New Jersey.[13]
Zeleny died at his home in New Jersey on December 24, 2023, at the age of 81.[14]
Academic career
Prior to 1967, Zeleny's research involved Critical Path Analysis. In 1972 he initiated research on Multiple Criteria Decision Making (MCDM). Later he devoted himself to the field of Knowledge Management, and released the first publication in this field in 1987.[15] Other areas of research include Games with multiple payoffs,[16] Integrated Process Management (IPM), Knowledge-based theory of fuzzy sets, Baťa System of Management,[17] High-technology management, Mass customization, Portfolio selection, Risk analysis, Measurement of consumer attitudes, Human intuition, Creativity and judgment, Simulation models of biological organization, Autopoiesis, Artificial life (AL), Osmotic growths and synthetic biology, Spontaneous social organizations and early computer modeling (via GPSS, APL, FORTRAN and BASIC).
In later years, his research mainly focused on corporation as a living organism (The BioCycle of Business).[18] He also became active in consulting and later on in CEO coaching, while pursuing practical projects of Entrepreneurial University, Electro-mobility, Recycling and remanufacturing, and Integration of data, information, knowledge and wisdom into a coherent DIKW Management support.
From 1982, Zeleny served as professor of management systems at Fordham University at Lincoln Center,[20] New York City. He also accepted his permanent tenured appointment from Fordham University.
Among his other adjunct and visiting positions was a visiting professorship of environmental economics at Architettonici ed Ambientali, Dipartimento di Conservazione dei beni, Università degli Studi di Napoli Federico II, Naples, Italy, 1993.[24]
Author
Zeleny was the author of over 600 scientific publications, studies and books including ones on economics, management, cybernetics, operations research, general systems, history of science, total quality management, and simulation of autopoiesis and artificial life (AL). Zeleny has served as the editor-in-chief of Human Systems Management[25] over the last thirty three years.[26] He was also a member of editorial boards of other professional economic journals.
As of December 2013 he served on editorial or advisory boards of
International Journal of Information Technology and Decision Making[27]
International Journal of Mobile Learning and Organization, Economics and Management[28]
Journal of Competitiveness, Information and Operations Management Education[29]
International Journal of Information and Operations Management Education[30]
International Journal of Multicriteria Decision Making (IJMCDM)[31]
Books
Zeleny's books include:
Human Systems Management: Integrating Knowledge, Management and Systems, World Scientific, 2005
Information Technology in Business (Thomson International)
Multiple Criteria Decision Making (McGraw-Hill)
Linear Multiobjective Programming (Springer-Verlag)
Autopoiesis, Dissipative Structures and Spontaneous Social Orders (Westview Press)
MCDM-Past Decades and Future Trends (JAI Press)
Autopoiesis: A Theory of the Living Organization (Elsevier North Holland)
Uncertain Prospects Ranking and Portfolio Analysis (Verlag Anton Hain)
Multiple Criteria Decision Making (University of South Carolina Press)
^Yong Shi; David L. Olson; Antonie Stam, eds. (2007). Advances in Multiple Criteria Decision Making and Human Systems Management: Knowledge and Wisdom. IOS Press. ISBN978-1-58603-748-2.
^Zeleny, Milan (2010). "Multiobjective Optimization, Systems Design and de Novo Programming". Handbook of Multicriteria Analysis. Applied Optimization. Vol. 103. pp. 243–262. doi:10.1007/978-3-540-92828-7_8. ISBN978-3-540-92827-0.
^Zeleny, Milan (October 2011). "Multiple Criteria Decision Making (MCDM): From Paradigm Lost to Paradigm Regained?". Journal of Multi-Criteria Decision Analysis. 18 (1–2): 77–89. doi:10.1002/mcda.473.