DocumentCode
2942389
Title
The Ocean Drilling Program: A Case Study in International Science
Author
Sutherland, Alexander L. ; Toye, Sandra D.
Author_Institution
National Science Foundation, Washington, DC, USA
fYear
1987
fDate
Sept. 28 1987-Oct. 1 1987
Firstpage
705
Lastpage
710
Abstract
The Ocean Drilling Program, by almost any measure, is the largest international ocean sciences program in the world today. It has been in operation for four years, but can trace its roots back through its predecessor program, the Deep Sea Drilling Project, for nearly twenty-five years of successful operations and over a decade of formal, international participation. This program now involves the cooperation and contribution of 18 countries with an annual program cost in excess of $35 million dollars. This paper discusses the formal and informal mechanisms which form the basis for managing this highly successful international program. The paper discusses the rational for internationalization, government-to-government relations, contractual arrangements and scientific decision-making processes.
Keywords
Continents; Costs; Drilling; Earth; Economic forecasting; Environmental economics; Fuel economy; Geology; Oceans; Remote sensing;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
OCEANS '87
Conference_Location
Halifax, NS, Canada
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/OCEANS.1987.1160778
Filename
1160778
Link To Document