This thesis describes twenty-seven near-miss experiences by ten
merchant marine officers on the U.S. Great Lakes. The experiences are
related in the first person and include actions by self, other bridge watch
members, and other vessels. The focus of the work is on the relationship
between the near-miss experience and the organizational implications
related to those experiences.
The survey of the literature defines the near-miss experience and
two major previous efforts to obtain and record maritime near-misses.
The conceptual context places the near-miss in the traditional maritime
organization which is defined through analysis of boundary and environment,
horizontal and vertical differentiation, integration, conflict resolution,
information generation, and reward structures. The conceptual
context also describes three alternative perspectives of organization;
systemic, social-political and architectural.
The thesis is exploratory in nature: how and why the near-miss
occurred and remained a near-miss rather than becoming an accident.
Five propositions relating to anticipated changes in the organization
structure are used as the basis for case-study analysis. These propositions
relate to the changing of the organization structure by one or more persons
on the bridge watch. The propositions are supported by about one-fifth of
the related experiences. An additional proposition is also supported by
about one-fifth of the related experiences.
Recommendations include the continued collection and codification
of near-miss experiences, experimentation using full-mission simulation,
and research into the potential for near-misses under the one-person bridge
organization structure.
Date of Award | 1991 |
---|
Original language | English |
---|
Awarding Institution | |
---|
THE NEAR-MISS EXPERIENCE: ORGANIZATION CHANGE IN THE MARITIME BRIDGE-WATCH
DOUWSMA, D. G. (Author). 1991
Student thesis: PhD