"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.
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