This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (February 2024)
Career
Diane Vaughan studied Sociology at Ohio State University, and received her PhD in 1979. From 1979 to 1982 she was a Post-Doctoral Fellow in Sociology of Social Control at Yale University. From 1982-1984 she was a Research Associate, at Wellesley College Center for Research on Women, and then joined the Department of Sociology at Boston College. From 1986 to 1987 she was a Visiting Fellow, Centre for Socio-Legal Studies, Wolfson College, Oxford.
She taught at Boston College from 1984 to 2005.[4] Since 2005 she has been a Professor of Sociology and International and Public Affairs at Columbia University.
In the understanding of safety and risk, Vaughan is perhaps best known for coining the phrase "normalization of deviance",[7] which she has used to explain the sociological causes of the Challenger and Columbia disasters.[8][9][10] Vaughan defines this as a process where a clearly unsafe practice comes to be considered normal if it does not immediately cause a catastrophe: "a long incubation period [before a final disaster] with early warning signs that were either misinterpreted, ignored or missed completely."[11][12]
Uncoupling. Turning Points in Intimate Relationships (1986), Oxford University Press.
The Challenger Launch Decision: Risky Technology, Culture and Deviance at NASA (1996), Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
“Theorizing: Analogy, Cases, and Comparative Social Organization.”(2014) In: Richard Swedberg (ed.), Theorizing in the Social Sciences. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 61-8