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Aug 2000
ISBN 0262082853
528 pp.
9 illus.
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Systems, Experts, and Computers
Agatha C. Hughes and Thomas P. Hughes

After World War II, a systems approach to solving complex problems and managing complex systems came into vogue among engineers, scientists, and managers, fostered in part by the diffusion of digital computing power. Enthusiasm for the approach peaked during the Johnson administration, when it was applied to everything from military command and control systems to poverty in American cities. Although its failure in the social sphere, coupled with increasing skepticism about the role of technology and "experts" in American society, led to a retrenchment, systems methods are still part of modern managerial practice.

This groundbreaking book charts the origins and spread of the systems movement. It describes the major players -- including RAND, MITRE, Ramo-Wooldrige (later TRW), and the International Institute of Applied Systems Analysis -- and examines applications in a wide variety of military, government, civil, and engineering settings. The book is international in scope, describing the spread of systems thinking in France and Sweden. The story it tells helps to explain engineering thought and managerial practice during the last sixty years.

Table of Contents
 Introduction
by Thomas P. Hughes and Agatha C. Hughes
1 Automation's Finest Hour: Radar and System Integration in World War II
by David A. Mindell
2 The Adoption of Operations Research in the United States During World War II
by Erik P. Rau
3 From Concurrency to Phase Planning: An Episode in the History of Systems Management
by Stephen B. Johnson
4 System Reshapes the Corporation: Joint Ventures in the Bay Area Rapid Transit System, 1962-1972
by Glenn Bagos
5 Planning a Technological Nation: Systems Thinking and the Politics of National Identity in Postwar France
by Gabrielle Hecht
6 A Worm in the Bud? Computers, Systems, and the Safety-Case Problem
by Donald MacKenzie
7 Engineers of Managers? The Systems Analysis of Electronic Data Processing in the Federal Bureaucracy
by Atsushi Akera
8 The World in a Machine: Origins and Impact of Early computerized Global Systems Models
by Paul N. Edwards
9 The Medium is the Message, or How Context Matters: the RAND Corporation Build an Economics of Innovation, 1946-1962
by David A. Hounshell
10 Out of the Blue yonder: The Transfer of Systems Thinking From the Pentagon to the Great Society, 1961-1965
by David R. Jardini
11 The Limits of Technology Transfer: Civil Systems at TRW, 1965-1975
by Davis Dyer
12 From Operations Research to Futures Studies: The Establishment, Diffusion, and Transformation of the Systems Approach in Sweden, 1945-1980
by Arne Kajiser and Joar Tiberg
13 The International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis, the TAP Project, and the RAINS Model
by Harvey Brooks and Alan McDonald
14 RAND, IIASA, and the Conduct of Systems Analysis
by Roger E. Levien
15 How a Genetic Code Became an Information System
by Lily E. Kay
 Notes on Contributors
 Index
 
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