Making sense of rework and its unintended consequence in projects: the emergence of uncomfortable knowledge

Yes === To make sense of the rework phenomena that plagues construction projects a longitudinal exploration and mixed-method approach was undertaken to understand its causal setting and why it remained an on-going issue for organizations contracted to deliver an asset. The research reveals that rewo...

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Main Authors: Love, P.E.D., Smith, J., Ackermann, F., Irani, Zahir
Language:en
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10454/16877
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spelling ndltd-BRADFORD-oai-bradscholars.brad.ac.uk-10454-168772021-03-11T05:01:10Z Making sense of rework and its unintended consequence in projects: the emergence of uncomfortable knowledge Love, P.E.D. Smith, J. Ackermann, F. Irani, Zahir Construction Errors Quality Rework Safety Zemblanity Yes To make sense of the rework phenomena that plagues construction projects a longitudinal exploration and mixed-method approach was undertaken to understand its causal setting and why it remained an on-going issue for organizations contracted to deliver an asset. The research reveals that rework was an zemblanity (i.e., being an unpleasant un-surprise) that resulted in: (1) project managers ignoring established organisation-wide procedures and, at their discretion, amend them to suit their own goals while denouncing the importance of recording and learning from non-conformances; (2) a deficiency of organisational controls and routines to contain and reduce rework; and (3) an absence of an organisation-project dyad that supported and promoted an environment of psychological safety. A new theoretical conceptualization of error causation that is intricately linked to rework and safety incidents is presented. The research provides managers with ‘uncomfortable knowledge’, which is needed to provide insights into the determinants of rework that form part of their everyday practice. Australian Research Council (DP130103018) 2019-03-04T16:05:30Z 2019-03-04T16:05:30Z 2019-04 2019-02-23 2019-03-09 Article Accepted manuscript Love PED, Smith J, Ackermann F et al (2019) Making sense of rework and its unintended consequence in projects: the emergence of uncomfortable knowledge. International Journal of Project Management. 37(3): 501-516. http://hdl.handle.net/10454/16877 en https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijproman.2019.02.004 © 2019 Elsevier Ltd, APM and IPMA. All rights reserved. Reproduced in accordance with the publisher's self-archiving policy. This manuscript version is made available under the CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 license.
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Construction
Errors
Quality
Rework
Safety
Zemblanity
spellingShingle Construction
Errors
Quality
Rework
Safety
Zemblanity
Love, P.E.D.
Smith, J.
Ackermann, F.
Irani, Zahir
Making sense of rework and its unintended consequence in projects: the emergence of uncomfortable knowledge
description Yes === To make sense of the rework phenomena that plagues construction projects a longitudinal exploration and mixed-method approach was undertaken to understand its causal setting and why it remained an on-going issue for organizations contracted to deliver an asset. The research reveals that rework was an zemblanity (i.e., being an unpleasant un-surprise) that resulted in: (1) project managers ignoring established organisation-wide procedures and, at their discretion, amend them to suit their own goals while denouncing the importance of recording and learning from non-conformances; (2) a deficiency of organisational controls and routines to contain and reduce rework; and (3) an absence of an organisation-project dyad that supported and promoted an environment of psychological safety. A new theoretical conceptualization of error causation that is intricately linked to rework and safety incidents is presented. The research provides managers with ‘uncomfortable knowledge’, which is needed to provide insights into the determinants of rework that form part of their everyday practice. === Australian Research Council (DP130103018)
author Love, P.E.D.
Smith, J.
Ackermann, F.
Irani, Zahir
author_facet Love, P.E.D.
Smith, J.
Ackermann, F.
Irani, Zahir
author_sort Love, P.E.D.
title Making sense of rework and its unintended consequence in projects: the emergence of uncomfortable knowledge
title_short Making sense of rework and its unintended consequence in projects: the emergence of uncomfortable knowledge
title_full Making sense of rework and its unintended consequence in projects: the emergence of uncomfortable knowledge
title_fullStr Making sense of rework and its unintended consequence in projects: the emergence of uncomfortable knowledge
title_full_unstemmed Making sense of rework and its unintended consequence in projects: the emergence of uncomfortable knowledge
title_sort making sense of rework and its unintended consequence in projects: the emergence of uncomfortable knowledge
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/10454/16877
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AT ackermannf makingsenseofreworkanditsunintendedconsequenceinprojectstheemergenceofuncomfortableknowledge
AT iranizahir makingsenseofreworkanditsunintendedconsequenceinprojectstheemergenceofuncomfortableknowledge
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