Organization at the limit: Lessons from the Columbia disaster

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Author(s)
Starbuck, W. and Farjoun, M. (eds)
Pages
384pp
Date published
01 Jul 2005
Publisher
Wiley
Type
Books
Keywords
Leadership and Decisionmaking, System-wide performance
Countries
United States of America

The book offers important insight relevant to Corporate, Government and Global organizations management in general. The internationally recognised authors tackle vital issues in decision making, how organizational risk is managed, how can technological and organizational complexities interact, what are the impediments for effective learning and how large, medium, and small organizations can, and in fact must, increase their resilience. Managers, organizational consultants, expert professionals, and training specialists; particularly those in high risk organizations, may find the issues covered in the book relevant to their daily work and a potential catalyst for thought and action. 

A timely analysis of the Columbia disaster and the organizational lessons that can be learned from it.

Includes contributions from those involved in the Investigation Board report into the incident.

Tackles vital issues such as the role of time pressures and goal conflict in decision making, and the impediments for effective learning.

Examines how organizational risk is managed and how technological and organizational complexities interact.

Assesses how large, medium, and small organizations can, and in fact must, increase their resilience.

Questions our eagerness to embrace new technologies, yet reluctance to accept the risks of innovation.

Offers a step by step understanding of the complex factors that led to disaster.