Megaproject Organization and Performance Megaproject Organization and Performance

Megaproject Organization and Performance

The Myth and Political Reality

Nuno Gil and Others
    • $45.99
    • $45.99

Publisher Description

Megaproject Organization and Performance: The Myth and Political Reality delves into the complex world of organizing megaprojects and investigates the extent to which the performance of these projects could be traced back to their organizational structure. Through multiple case study research, including the London Olympic Park and Heathrow Airport Terminal 2, the authors show how megaprojects are unique in how they are organized. They explore core-periphery relationships between promotors who control strategic choices, and suppliers, the contracted experts who provide the actual resources to get the project done. The implications of these structural–performance relationships within a robust economy are then compared with railroad and highway development projects in the developing economies of Nigeria, Uganda, and India. This in-depth study brings a complementary perspective to megaproject literature and enables us to reconcile conflicting explanations for the regularity with which megaprojects miss performance targets. With pluralism at the core of the megaproject's organizational structure, the authors argue that megaprojects work best when accountability is shared and everyone has a stake in the final outcome.

GENRE
Business & Personal Finance
RELEASED
2017
July 24
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
170
Pages
PUBLISHER
Project Management Institute
SELLER
Bookwire US Inc
SIZE
3.7
MB
The Oxford Handbook of Megaproject Management The Oxford Handbook of Megaproject Management
2017
Global Projects Global Projects
2014
The Oxford Handbook of Project Management The Oxford Handbook of Project Management
2012
Organization Design Organization Design
2018
Managing Inter-Organizational Collaborations Managing Inter-Organizational Collaborations
2019
The Bradford Studies of Strategic Decision Making The Bradford Studies of Strategic Decision Making
2017