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Journal ArticleDOI

Do all crises have to become disasters? Risk and risk mitigation

Hilary Davies, +1 more
- 01 Mar 1998 - 
- Vol. 16, Iss: 1, pp 5-9
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TLDR
In this article, the authors describe some features and characteristics of crises that could become disasters and discuss the features of organisations (such as tight coupling and interdependency) that can affect their exposure to risk and suggest some crisis-mitigating strategies that could be adopted by property managers.
Abstract
Risk and uncertainty are part of the everyday operating environment for all organisations. Occasionally the risks may be sufficient to generate a crisis which, if left unattended, can become a disaster. The key person in an organisation who is often charged with the responsibility of recovering the supporting services that will enable the business to start functioning again is the facility manager, in charge of all property management functions. What should facility managers be aware of in terms of the characteristics of risk and crises and organisational culture that will affect their ability to plan for disaster recovery? Describes some features and characteristics of crises that could become disasters and discusses the features of organisations (such as tight‐coupling and interdependency) that can affect their exposure to risk ‐ crisis‐prone or crisis‐prepared ‐ and suggests some crisis‐mitigating strategies that could be adopted by property managers. Concludes that organisations can become crisis‐prepared, if they adopt a range of strategies, such as providing good feedback on previous incidents, setting up a formal safety organisation, inculcating safety culture norms and beliefs about the importance of safety, devolving decision making but retaining monitoring by experienced staff, training and educating to create an environment of constant awareness and hence reliability. The end product should be that those unpredictable everyday minor crises do not escalate to become disasters.

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Citations
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A review of research on tourism risk, crisis and disaster management: Launching the annals of tourism research curated collection on tourism risk, crisis and disaster management

TL;DR: The authors reviewed 142 papers published between 1960 and 2018 on tourism risk, crisis and disaster management, taking a thematic approach to synthesise past research focus and identify gaps, examines research methodologies employed, and suggests future research and methodological approaches to help progress the field.
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Building tourism organizational resilience to crises and disasters: A dynamic capabilities view

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors propose that dynamic capabilities provide a mechanism that enables tourism organizations to respond to disruptive environmental changes through a process of routine transformation, resource allocation, and utilization, and the resulting theoretical framework takes a processual view to show how an organization's existing operational routines transform into new ones that are resilient to disruptive events.
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Crisis and disaster management in Jordanian hotels: practices and cultural considerations

TL;DR: In this article, the authors identify major risks that have the potential to place Jordanian hotels in crisis or disaster situations; investigate the tools/frameworks adopted by Jordanian hotels to manage crises and disasters; and investigate the cultural factors influencing the wider adoption of crisis and disaster management best practices in Jordanian hotels.
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fMRI neuromarketing and consumer learning theory: Word-of-mouth effectiveness after product harm crisis

TL;DR: The authors examined the impact of gender on the neural substrates of theories on consumer behavior and examined whether gender influences brain activation associated with word-of-mouth (WOM) communications after a product harm crisis.
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An emerging online social network and disaster-induced collective stress

TL;DR: Evidence is found from the emerging structure shaped by connected nodes and linkage via changes in recurrent retweets on the basis of stages of the coping and sensemaking process of the Sewol ferry disaster to propose an evolving topic-based social network through the central role of Retweets among people over time.
References
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Book

Crisis Management: Planning for the Inevitable

Steven Fink
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors look at the way businesses have handled various crises, explain how to predict the development of problems, and how to set up crisis management guidelines, and present a set of guidelines for crisis management.
Book

Bhopal : anatomy of a crisis

TL;DR: Crisis in Bhopal The causes and characteristics of industrial Crises Causes of the bhopal disaster The Controversial Consequences of the Bhopala disaster Three Models of Crisis A Multiple-Perspective Approach Preventing and Coping with Industrial Crises Lingering Repercussions of Bhopsal as mentioned in this paper
Journal ArticleDOI

Bhopal: Anatomy of a Crisis

TL;DR: Crisis in Bhopal The causes and characteristics of industrial Crises Causes of the bhopal disaster The Controversial Consequences of the Bhopala disaster Three Models of Crisis A Multiple-Perspective Approach Preventing and Coping with Industrial Crises Lingering Repercussions of Bhopsal as discussed by the authors
Journal ArticleDOI

Causes of Disaster: Sloppy Management

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors propose two levels of correction to avoid disaster preconditions: 1) during the incubation period preceding a major incident, and 2) during disaster pre-conditions generated as a result of the normal functioning of larger managerial and technical systems.
Journal ArticleDOI

Do (some) organizations cause their own crises? The cultural profiles of crisis-prone vs. crisis-prepared organizations:

TL;DR: In this paper, four key factors that make an organization either crisis-prone or crisis-prepared have been identified on the basis of interviews with over 200 executives in more than 100 firms spanning a wide variety of industries.