Title: Preparing for Future Crises: Research Lessons
1Preparing for Future Crises Research Lessons
- Arjen Boin, Ph.D.
- Louisiana State University
2Outline
- Introduction
- Peering into the future rise of transboundary
crises - Future challenges patterns and shifts
- Key lessons from crisis research
- The need for resilience
3Defining Transboundary Crises
- We speak of a transboundary crisis when the
functioning of multiple, life-sustaining systems
or critical infrastructures is acutely threatened
and the causes of failure remain unclear.
4A Few Examples
- Kobe, Chernobyl, Canadian Ice Storms, Buenos
Aires blackout, 9/11, SARS, Asian tsunami,
Hurricane Katrina, China Earthquake (2008),
Houston Blackout (Ike) - Going on now Financial crisis, Mexican flu
5Characteristics of TC
- Transboundary crises
- Cross geographic and functional boundaries
- Causes are not clear
- No clear beginning or end
- Periods of rapid escalation
- Unpredictable trajectory
- No ownership
6Damage potential TC
- The damage potential of transboundary crises
- Indirect damage accumulates through crippling of
CIs and increased duration
7Increased frequency Driving Trends
- Changing threat agents
- Increased societal vulnerability
8Increased societal vulnerability
- Growing complexities and interdepencies
- Changing societal and political climate
- Rising economic vulnerabilities
- Design failures (the unintended consequences of
prevention-oriented strategies)
9Changing Threat Agents
- (Bio) Technology jumps
- New forms of terrorism
- Climate change
- Global shifts
- Demographics
10Paradoxes
- While public leaders can do less to prevent
crises, they are increasingly held responsible. - Trends increase vulnerability of modern
societies, while increasing crisis management
capacity.
11Transboundary Crises Coping Challenges
- We know that
- Prevention is hard if not impossible
- New forms of adversity are likely
- Failure is not an option (politically, socially
and economically) - Government is not geared towards dealing with
transboundary crises
12Challenges for Crisis Leadership
- Preparing in the face of indifference
- Making sense of crisis developments
- Managing large response networks
- Meaning making Whats the story?
- Learning from failure, while being held
accountable
13A. Preparing for Crisis
- The costs of permanent preparedness
- Planning vs flexibility
- The politics of preparedness
14B. Sense making why it is hard
- 1) Most organizations are not designed to spot
impending crises - 2)Social/political construction of threat
perceptions - 3)The impenetrable policy agenda (many issues
have crisis potential) - 4)Psychological factors (stress pathologies)
15C. Managing large response networks
- Making critical decisions
- Working with limited information
- The coordination challenge Who does what?
- Communicating to the public
16Meaning making Offering answers
- Whats the story? Reducing public and political
uncertainty - Bush after 9/11, Bush after Katrina
- Core claim its not about the true story, its
about the best communicated story - Leaders have to get their story out in an arena
dominated by competition - Failure can be costly
17Learning
- Learning is expected (DHS)
- Learning is also difficult puzzling and powering
- Pessimists learning from crises is
counter-productive - threat-rigidity hypothesis
- Organizations cannot learn
- Sticking to successful lessons of the past
- Politics of accountability
18Lessons from Crisis Research
- Avoidable failures
- Pointers principles
19Avoidable Failures
- Thinking it cannot happen here
- No planning
- Too much belief in the plan
- The paralyzing quest for information
- Waiting for communication
- Command and Control
- Fighting the media
- Playing the Blame Game
- Thinking its over (too soon)
20An Effective Response System
- Short term resilience of citizens, first-line
responders, and operational leaders - Long term strategic leadership as a crucial
variable
21The importance of resilience
- Resilience rapid recombination of available
resources - Modernization undermines and facilitates
resilience - Primary condition trust (social capital)
22Strategic Leadership Priorities in the First Phase
- Support and facilitate emerging resilience
- Organize outside forces
- Explain what is happening
- Initiate long-term reconstruction
- Bottom line Immediate relief is not an option
23Engineering resilience A leadership
responsibility
- Basic response mechanisms in place
- Training potential responders (how to think for
themselves) - Continuous exercising
- Planning as process
- Create mobile units media-style
- Prepare for long-term aftermath
- Create (international) expert network
24Basic response mechanisms
- Warning
- Mobilization
- Registration
- Evacuation
- Shelters
- Emergency medical care
- Search and rescue
- Information dissemination
- Law and order
25Strategic leadership training
- The art of assessment
- Work with the media (monitoring messaging)
- Capitalizing on emerging networks
- Identifying capable partners
- Working with experts
26The art of assessment
- What do we have left?
- What can it do?
- How can we put it together?
- What can we no longer do?
- What do we need?
27Critical constraints
- The symbolic need for a command control myth
- The institutional vulnerability of modern
mega-cities - The culture of the risk society
- The politics of crisis management
28Thank you!