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Dead Reckoning Diane Vaughan

Dead Reckoning By Diane Vaughan

Dead Reckoning by Diane Vaughan


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Dead Reckoning Summary

Dead Reckoning: Air Traffic Control, System Effects, and Risk by Diane Vaughan

Vaughan unveils the complicated and high-pressure world of air traffic controllers as they navigate technology and political and public climates, and shows how they keep the skies so safe.

When two airplanes were flown into the World Trade Center towers on September 11, 2001, Americans watched in uncomprehending shock as first responders struggled to react to the situation on the ground. Congruently, another remarkable and heroic feat was taking place in the air: more than six hundred and fifty air traffic control facilities across the country coordinated their efforts to ground four thousand flights in just two hoursan achievement all the more impressive considering the unprecedented nature of the task.

In Dead Reckoning, Diane Vaughan explores the complex work of air traffic controllers, work that is built upon a close relationship between human organizational systems and technology and is remarkably safe given the high level of risk. Vaughan observed the distinct skill sets of air traffic controllers and the ways their workplaces changed to adapt to technological developments and public and political pressures. She chronicles the ways these forces affected their jobs, from their relationships with one another and the layouts of their workspace to their understanding of their job and its place in society. The result is a nuanced and engaging look at an essential role that demands great coordination, collaboration, and focusa role that technology will likely never be able to replace. Even as the book conveys warnings about complex systems and the liabilities of technological and organizational innovation, it shows the kinds of problem-solving solutions that evolved over time and the importance of people.

Dead Reckoning Reviews

"From the dead reckoning of early navigation with its reliance on sun, stars, and wind, Vaughan develops her analysis of the present-day work of an air traffic controller, which involves an increasingly high degree of automation with consequent loss of skills and many controllers jobs. Drawing on interview data, Vaughan illuminates what has made air travel so safe by examining the large sociotechnical systems in which work is performed, focusing on the changing nature of organizations, technologies, and work. Recommended." * Choice *
"Diane VaughansDead Reckoning: Air Traffic Control, System Effects, and Riskshows exactlyhoworganizational excellence is achieved through organizational members ongoing collaborative work undergirded byand sometimes despiteorganizational rules, political pressures, and other societal demands that shapes the external environment. The result is an excellent portrayal of what Daniel F. Chambliss once called the mundanity of excellence in complex organizationsshowing how far from obvious, or mundane, it is." * Social Forces *
"Diane Vaughans famous analysis of the Challenger tragedy is followed here with a study of air traffic control. Vaughan really wants to know how it works and she succeeds. As a result she is in the right place, both physically and analytically, to explain what happened to a sky full of airplanes on 9/11. And Vaughan can write: just her introductory description of how she invaded the controllers domain is gripping. Like her Challenger book, this sets the gold standard." -- Harry Collins, Cardiff University
With Dead Reckoning, Vaughana leading student of how organizations go wrongstudies an organizational system, the air flight control system for commercial aviation, with an extraordinary track record of getting things right. The author approaches her topic from every direction, seamlessly integrating organization theory and technology studies; analyzing how skill is embedded both in individuals and in workgroups but also how the institutional systems in which controllers live and with which they must interact shape their work; and, in a model of multi-method, multi-level research, combining multi-site ethnography with historical analysis spanning forty years and including such events as the PATCO strike and the terrorist attacks of 9/11.The result is a breathtaking achievement, a comprehensive, analytically shrewd, and gracefully written study that explains the effectiveness of air flight controllers both in routine times and during crises. -- Paul DiMaggio, New York University
"Vaughan explores air traffic control with unparalleled care: an awe-inspiring breadth, depth, and lyricality that is mostly unmatched in contemporary scholarship on organizations, cementing her reputation as one of the most inspired scholars of her generation." * Organization Studies *

About Diane Vaughan

Diane Vaughan is professor of sociology and international and public affairs at Columbia University. She is the author of many books including The Challenger Launch Decision: Risky Technology, Culture, and Deviance at NASA, also published by the University of Chicago Press.

Table of Contents

List of Figures and Tables

Part I: Beginnings
Chapter 1. Dead Reckoning
Why Air Traffic Control?
Introduction to the System: A Monkey Could Do This Job
System Effects on the Project
On Time and Discovery: Historical Ethnography and Socio-technical System History
The Architecture of This Book

Chapter 2. History as Cause: System Emergence, System Effects
A Formation Story
Precedent and Innovation: Boundaries and Boundary Work
The Age of Innovators: The Diffusion of Ideas, Networks, and Infrastructure Formation, 18801920
The Age of Organization: Controllers, Technologies, and Boundaries, Ground and Sky, 19201950
The Jet Age: Congestion, Technological Lag, and PATCO, 19501980
The Age of Conflict, Decline, and Repair: The Strike, NATCA, and Technological Glitches, 19802000
Dead Reckoning at the Turn of the Century: History, Boundaries, and Turf Wars in the Sky, 20002001

Part II: Producing Controllers
Chapter 3. From Skill Acquisition to Expertise
The Academy: The Screen, the Game, and Survival of the Fittest
The Facility: The Apprentice and the Trainer
The Subtleties of the Craft: Dead Reckoning

Chapter 4. Embodiment: The Social Shaping of Controllers
Carryover into Everyday Life
Fundamental Change: Becoming a Type A Personality
A Cultural System of Knowledge: Expertise, Embodiment, and Ethnocognition

Part III: Boundary Work: Airspace, Place, and Dead Reckoning
System Effects: Culture, Ethnocognition, and Distributed Cognition

Chapter 5. Boston Center and Bedford Tower
Boston Center
Bedford Tower

Chapter 6. The Terminal: Boston TRACON and Boston Tower
The TRACON: Boston Terminal Radar Approach Control
Boston Tower
The Terminal: Boston TRACON and Tower

Part IV: Emotional Labor, Emotion Work
Chapter 7. Mistake and Error: Emotional Labor
Close Calls
Having a Deal
Space, Place, and Boundaries: When Is a Deal Not a Deal?
Mistake and Error as System Effects: Crossing the Boundaries of Time and Social Space

Chapter 8. Risk and Stress: Emotion Work
Losing Control: Stress-Producing Conditions
The Social and Cultural Transformation of Risky Work
Culture, Cognition, and the Normalization of Risk and Stress
The Individual, the Group, and Cultural Devices

Part V: That Little Frisson of Terror
Chapter 9. September 11
Boston Center
The Command Center
Boston Center
The TRACON
Boston Tower
Bedford Tower
The Attacks: System Response and System Effects

Chapter 10. The War on Terror: Policing the Sky
Changing Boundaries: Restrictions, Translation, and Local Coordination
Police Work, Emotion Work
A Fragile Stability: 2002
The War on Terror: System Response and System Effects

Chapter 11. Symbolic Boundaries: Distinction, Occupational Community, and Moral Work
Formal Structure and Occupational Community
Status and Moral Work
Maintaining Moral Boundaries

Part VI: System Effects, Boundary Work, and Risk
Boundary Work as Power Work
The Intersection of Two Trajectories: Implementation, Budget Battles, Shutdowns, and Failures
The Liabilities of Technological and Organizational Innovation

Chapter 12. The Age of Automation: 2002Present
Boston Tower and Boston TRACON
Boston Tower
Boston TRACON

Chapter 13. Continuities, Change, and Persistence
System Effects, Resilience, and Agency
Dead Reckoning: Coordinating Action and Anticipating Futures in Complex Organizational Systems

Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index

Additional information

NGR9780226826578
9780226826578
0226826570
Dead Reckoning: Air Traffic Control, System Effects, and Risk by Diane Vaughan
New
Paperback
The University of Chicago Press
2023-02-13
640
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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