Overview
- Authors:
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Stéphane Dauzère-Péres
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Rotterdam School of Management, Erasmus University Rotterdam, DR Rotterdam, The Netherlands
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Jean-Bernard Lasserre
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Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (C.N.R.S.) Laboratoire D’Automatique, D’Analyse des Systèmes (L.A.A.S.), Toulouse Cédex, France
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Table of contents (6 chapters)
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- Stéphane Dauzère-Péres, Jean-Bernard Lasserre
Pages 1-16
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- Stéphane Dauzère-Péres, Jean-Bernard Lasserre
Pages 17-44
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- Stéphane Dauzère-Péres, Jean-Bernard Lasserre
Pages 45-70
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- Stéphane Dauzère-Péres, Jean-Bernard Lasserre
Pages 71-95
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- Stéphane Dauzère-Péres, Jean-Bernard Lasserre
Pages 97-106
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- Stéphane Dauzère-Péres, Jean-Bernard Lasserre
Pages 107-126
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Back Matter
Pages 127-144
About this book
Production Management is a large field concerned with all the aspects related to production, from the very bottom decisions at the machine level, to the top-level strategic decisicns. In this book, we are concerned with production planning and scheduling aspects. Traditional production planning methodologies are based on a now widely ac cepted hierarchical decom?osition into several planning decision levels. The higher in the hierarchy, the more aggregate are the models and the more important are the decisions. In this book, we only consider the last two decision levels in the hierarchy, namely, the mid-term (or tacticaQ planning level and the short-term (or operationaQ scheduling level. In the literature and in practice, the decisions are taken in sequence and in a top-down approach from the highest level in the hierarchy to the bottom level. The decisions taken at some level in the hierarchy are constrained by those already taken at upper levels and in turn, must translate into feasible objectives for the next lower levels in the hierarchy. It is a common sense remark to say that the whole hierarchical decision process is coherent if the interactions between different levels in the hierarchy are taken into account so that a decision taken at some level in the hierarchy translates into a feasible objective for the next decision level in the hierarchy. However, and surpris ingly enough, this crucial consistency issue is rarely investigated and few results are available in the literature.
Authors and Affiliations
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Rotterdam School of Management, Erasmus University Rotterdam, DR Rotterdam, The Netherlands
Stéphane Dauzère-Péres
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Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (C.N.R.S.) Laboratoire D’Automatique, D’Analyse des Systèmes (L.A.A.S.), Toulouse Cédex, France
Jean-Bernard Lasserre