Normal Accidents: Living with High Risk Technologies - Updated EditionNormal Accidents analyzes the social side of technological risk. Charles Perrow argues that the conventional engineering approach to ensuring safety--building in more warnings and safeguards--fails because systems complexity makes failures inevitable. He asserts that typical precautions, by adding to complexity, may help create new categories of accidents. (At Chernobyl, tests of a new safety system helped produce the meltdown and subsequent fire.) By recognizing two dimensions of risk--complex versus linear interactions, and tight versus loose coupling--this book provides a powerful framework for analyzing risks and the organizations that insist we run them. |
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LibraryThing Review
User Review - setnahkt - LibraryThingAuthor Charles Perrow was a Yale sociology professor when he wrote Normal Accidents; he’s now an emeritus professor at both Yale and Stanford. The book is relatively old (1984, with a 1999 postscript ... Read full review
LibraryThing Review
User Review - gbsallery - LibraryThingThis book was recently reviewed positively in the Economist, which is usually a fairly good tip, and as I am interested in systems and complexity, I picked it up. Having now finished its 400-odd pages ... Read full review
Contents
3 | |
15 | |
Why We Have Not Had More TMIsBut Will Soon | 32 |
3 Complexity Coupling and Catastrophe | 62 |
4 Petrochemical Plants | 101 |
5 Aircraft and Airways | 123 |
6 Marine Accidents | 170 |
Dams Quakes Mines and Lakes | 232 |
9 Living with HighRisk Systems | 304 |
Afterword | 353 |
The Y2K Problem | 388 |
List of Acronyms | 413 |
Notes | 415 |
426 | |
441 | |
Space Weapons and DNA | 256 |