Temporary, Emergent Interorganizational Collaboration in Unexpected Circumstances: A Study of the Columbia Space Shuttle Response Effort

In an inductive case study of the Columbia space shuttle disaster response effort, we use observations, archival records, and in-depth interviews with representatives from several responding agencies to explore factors that facilitated this interorganizational collaboration. The Columbia response ef...

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Veröffentlicht in:Organization science (Providence, R.I.) R.I.), 2014-07, Vol.25 (4), p.1234-1252
Hauptverfasser: Beck, Tammy E., Plowman, Donde Ashmos
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Plowman, Donde Ashmos
description In an inductive case study of the Columbia space shuttle disaster response effort, we use observations, archival records, and in-depth interviews with representatives from several responding agencies to explore factors that facilitated this interorganizational collaboration. The Columbia response effort defies conventional theories of collaboration. Relative strangers from dissimilar agencies, without a designated leader or existing structure, quickly collaborated across organizational boundaries on an unprecedented and complex undertaking. We explain how four organizing actions enabled self-organizing and the two-staged development of trust and identity, ultimately leading to a successful unplanned collaboration. We rely on tenets of complexity theory to orient our case study and to propose a grounded theory of temporary, emergent interorganizational collaboration.
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subjects Analysis
Case studies
Chaos theory
Collaboration
complex adaptive systems
Complexity theory
Data analysis
Disaster recovery
Disasters
Emergency preparedness
Environmental agencies
Forest service
Group identity
Identity
Information search
Interorganizational relations
interorganizational relationships
Knowledge management
Leadership
Organizational identity
Outer space
Qualitative research
Social identity
Social interaction
South Carolina
Space shuttle
Space shuttles
Space travel
Studies
Success
Trust
U.S.A
title Temporary, Emergent Interorganizational Collaboration in Unexpected Circumstances: A Study of the Columbia Space Shuttle Response Effort
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