Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/3732
Title: The golden circle: A way of arguing and acting about technology in the London ambulance service
Authors: McGrath, K
Issue Date: 2002
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan
Citation: European Journal of Information Systems. 11(4): 251-266
Abstract: This paper analyses the way in which the London Ambulance Service recovered from the events of October 1992, when it implemented a computer-aided despatch system (LASCAD) that remained in service for less than two weeks. It examines the enactment of a programme of long-term organizational change, focusing on the implementation of an alternative computer system in 1996. The analysis in this paper is informed by actor-network theory, both by an early statement of this approach developed by Callon in the sociology of translation, and also by concepts and ideas from Latour’s more recent restatement of his own position. The paper examines how alternative interests emerged and were stabilized over time, in a way of arguing and acting among key players in the change programme, christened the Golden Circle. The story traces four years in the history of the London Ambulance Service, from the aftermath of October 1992 through the birth of the Golden Circle to the achievement of National Health Service (NHS) trust status. LASCAD was the beginning of the story, this is the middle, an end lies in the future, when the remaining elements of the change programme are enacted beyond the Golden Circle.
URI: http://www.palgrave-journals.com/ejis/journal/v11/n4/full/3000436a.html
http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/3732
ISSN: 0960-085X
Appears in Collections:Computer Science
Dept of Computer Science Research Papers

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