Inside NASA : high technology and organizational change in the U.S. space program
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Inside NASA : high technology and organizational change in the U.S. space program
(New series in NASA history)(Johns Hopkins paperbacks)
Johns Hopkins University Press, 1994, c1993
- : pbk
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 193-208) and index
"Johns Hopkins paperbacks edition, 1994"--T.p. verso
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Inside NASA explores how an agency praised for its planetary probes and expeditions to the moon became notorious for the explosion of the space shuttle Challenger and a series of other malfunctions. Using archival evidence as well as in-depth interviews with space agency officials, Howard McCurdy investigates the relationship between the performance of the American space program and NASA's organizational culture. He begins by identifying the beliefs, norms, and practices that guided NASA's early successes. Originally, the agency was dominated by the strong technical culture rooted in the research-and-development organizations from which NASA was formed. To launch the expeditions to the moon, McCurdy explains, this technical culture was linked to an organizational structure borrowed from the Air Force ballistic-missile program. Changes imposed to accomplish the lunar landing-along with the normal aging process and increased bureaucracy in the government as a whole-gradually eroded NASA's original culture and reduced its technical strength.
Table of Contents
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction: NASA's Organizational Culture
1. Building Blocks
2. Root Assumptions
3. Breaking Barriers
4. Becoming Conventional
5. Losing the Technical Culture
Conclusion: Governmental Performance and Cultural Instability
Appendix: NASA Culture Survey
Essays on Sources
Notes
Index
by "Nielsen BookData"