International civil air transport : transition following WW II
Author(s)
Pogue, L. Welch![Thumbnail](/bitstream/handle/1721.1/67930/FTL_R_1979_06.pdf.jpg?sequence=34&isAllowed=y)
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Other Contributors
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Flight Transportation Laboratory
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
International air transport, like many 20th Century marvels which are taken so much for granted today, broke out from its cocoon, so to speak, shortly after the end of World War II (WW II), took wing, and soared. Theretofore, its growth had been retarded by fear of flying, by restrictive policies in granting civil air rights based upon narrow views about the sovereignty of nations over their air space and by the inevitable "bugs" that plague the early phases of most innovative technologies. his paper will undertake to trace the high points in that post-WW II metamorphosis.
Description
June 1979 Lecture Delivered on June 15, 1979 in Cambridge, Massachusetts, in the Course Given by Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cooperation with the International Civil Aviation Organization on "Air Transportation--Economics, Management, and Planning"--p. [1] Includes bibliographical references
Date issued
1979Publisher
Cambridge, Mass. : Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Flight Transportation Laboratory, 1979
Other identifiers
05852889
Series/Report no.
FTL report (Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Flight Transportation Laboratory) ; R79-6
Keywords
Aeronautics, Commercial