Title: EERI Distinguished lecture
1(No Transcript)
2Earthquake Mitigation Implementation A
Sociotechnical System Approach
- Understanding the context for implementation in a
complex environment with competing worldviews - Earthquake Engineering Research Institute
- 2003 Distinguished Lecture
- by
- William J. Petak
- Presented at
- Purdue University
- September 30, 2003
3A distinguished engineer observed
- Unless engineers appreciate the social context
of technology . and the role of human
performance . they are unable to deal with
demons that undermine the intended benefits of
engineered structures.. - By both inclination and preparation, many
engineers approach the real world as though it
were uninhabited ... Engineering is more than
manipulation of intricate signs and symbols the
social and environmental context should also be
integrated into the engineering curriculum.
Wenk, Edward, 1996, December, Teaching
Engineering as a Social Science, ASEE PRISM, pp.
24 28
4- Edward Wenk, Professor Emeritus of Engineering,
University of Washington - First Science Advisor to the U.S. Congress
- Science Advisor to Presidents Kennedy, Johnson,
and Nixon
5Education for the Profession Formerly Known as
Engineering, January 24, 2003
- The basic engineering model is rapidly being
displaced by much more complex interactions of
technoscience a constant process of
interaction in interdisciplinary projects where
the projects, not the disciplines, define the
terms of engagement. - Students need to be educated in an environment
where they get used to justifying and explaining
their approach to solving problems and also to
dealing with people who have other ways of
defining and solving problems.
- Rosalind Williams, Director, MIT Program in
Science, Technology and Society.- Chronicle of
Higher Education
6What do these statements have to do with
implementation of earthquake mitigation
technologies for lifelines?
7I believe that..
- A limited worldview and partial perspective of
disciplines involved generate actions that are
unsustainable and - as Professor Wenk has suggested
- In order for engineers to effectively engage the
political process, they need to understand the
interactions between technology and social
processes
Gunderson, Lance H. and C. S. Holling, 2002,
PANARCHY Understanding Transformations in Human
and Natural Systems, Island press, Washington,
D.C.
8The underlying problem
- Collectively and historically, we have been
pretty good at reducing the earthquake risk for
new structures and systems - In the next few decades, the greatest opportunity
for significantly improving seismic safety is by
mitigating the risks associated with existing
structures and systems - However, implementing mitigation for existing
structures and systems has proven to be
problematic, even in shaky California
9In the current approach . . .
- Earthquake risk problem is approached with a
technical solution focus - Mitigation advocates tend to promote narrow
technological fixes as optimal best solutions - System performance is complex - simplified by
dividing into subsystems until a problem is
arrived at that can be solved - using rational
engineering methods - Search for the one best way - optimal solution
provides limited ability to address tradeoffs
related to expenditures for seismic safety
10- Advocates have been slow to learn how to devise
policies and programs that are acceptable in a
dynamic system with multiple worldviews -- a
system in which both the problem and the decision
context are continually morphing
11Heres the problem . . .
- Engineering, technology, economics, and
organizational disciplines each have tested
insights, but they are all only partial
perspectives - Each generates actions that, by themselves, do
not necessarily improve community resilience to
earthquakes - The need is to develop integrative approaches
that combine disciplinary strengths while filling
the gaps in knowledge and understanding between
the disciplines
12A sociotechnical systems approach provides a
framework for understanding the context for
mitigation implementation in a complex
environment with competing worldviews
13Sociotechnical System View
ORGANIZATIONAL ASPECTS
PRIMARY ORGANIZATIONAL ACTORS Agencies,
Investors, Institutions, Industry
SECONDARY ORGANIZATIONS Communities, Policy
makers, Regulators, Lenders, Insurers, Unions
SOCIO-TECHNICAL SETTING
PHYSICAL SETTING New and Existing Structures
and Lifeline Systems
POLITICAL ACTIVITY
DECISION
TECHNOLOGY Performance Based Engineering
INDIVIDUAL ACTORS Advocates, Opponents
TECHNO-PERSONAL SETTING
TECHNICAL ASPECTS
PERSONAL ASPECTS
Adapted from Linstone, H., 1984, Multiple
Perspectives for Decision Making Bridging the
Gap Between Analysis and Action,
Elisevier-Science Publications, New York, pg 40
14Why a sociotechnical system approach?
- It is a question of perspective -
- Focus on multiple perspectives - problems and
issues that require application of engineering
technology, but within a social, economic and
political context - versus
- Focus limited to determining the single optimized
engineering best solution based solely on data,
quantification of information and models bounded
by a limited number of elements
15A sociotechnical systems approach
- Requires distinguishing between how to address
the earthquake problem and what the problem is
understood to be from a - - Technical perspective
- Organizational/Institutional perspective
- Personal/Individual perspective
- Aids in expanding the worldview of each
discipline
16Technical perspective
- System performance is complex - simplified by
dividing into subsystems until a problem is
arrived at that can be solved - Simplification leads to working on a narrow
problem e.g., beam /column connection - Important but limited when addressing the greater
system problem of implementation - Engineers should be principle advocates how
community should address earthquake problem
17Organizational aspects
- Organizations include family, community, state,
union, and corporation or company - all are
examples that interact with technology - Organizations may be formal or informal,
hierarchical or egalitarian, permanent or
temporary - They are the beneficiaries, advocates, opponents,
and regulators who become involved in
implementation of mitigation technology
18Individual aspects
- Individuals matter - decisions reflect
personality, values and preferences - helps
identify the characteristics and behavior of
organizations - May be viewed as visionaries, realists,
promoters, obstructionists, and operators - Activities may be as important as those of
organizations - Individuals are unique and judge earthquake
problems and solutions based on personal
experiences, beliefs, intuition, and self
interest
19Political culture
- Political action represents well organized
interplay between organizations and individuals - Mitigation is to protect a community and its
citizens mitigation is in the public interest - Mitigation of private sector economic loss -
generally considered the private sectors
responsibility - Highly technical information is often discounted
in favor of social interests and values
20Free market context
- Philosophical orientation and basis for
mitigation implementation decision making - Organizations free to work to gain market share
and maximize return on investment - Property owners responsible for managing their
risks - Governmental intervention regulation should be
only when absolutely necessary - Regulations, rules, ordinances are for protection
of the public interest
21EARTHQUAKE HAZARD SUBSYSTEM ----------------------
- EVENT AND INTENSITY PROBABILITY AT LOCATION
BUILT ENVIRONMENT SUBSYSTEM
---------------------------------
COMMUNITY/ORGANIZATIONAL FUNCTIONAL
PRODUCTIVITY REQUIREMENTS
POLITICAL, ECONOMIC, SOCIETAL
SUBSYSTEM -------------------------------- RESOURC
E ALLOCATION STAKEHOLDER INTERESTS
DESIGN AND CONSTRUCTION SUBSYSTEM --------------
--- ENGINEERING PERFORMANCE AND COST ANALYSIS
TRADE OFF
LEGAL AND REGULATORY SUBSYSTEM
----------------------------------- FEDERAL AND
STATE LAWS AND LOCAL ORDINANCES
MITIGATION IMPLEMENTATION DECISION MAKING
SUBSYSTEM
COMMUNITY - ORGANIZATION IMPLEMENTATION
DECISIONS ACCEPTABLE?
YES
NO
22Sociotechnical approach
- Provides a context and perspective that
facilitates addressing earthquake mitigation, not
only as an engineering problem to be solved, but
also as organizational and community problems and
solutions associated with the implementation of
mitigation technology.
23Mitigation policy making context
- Community sustainability goals/objectives
- Community understanding - objective vs. perceived
risk - Political environment/capacity who pays and who
benefits equitable distribution of benefits and
costs - Constituency knowledge and support
- Economic conditions
24For organizations institutions
- The world is seen from the point of view of how
mitigation implementation affects their
individual business cost, disruption, liability
(especially for deregulated entities) - Implementation of mitigation measures must
correspond to current priorities, standard
operating procedures and practices - Each will have a different perspective on
problems and solutions and their impacts (public
owned vs. private)
25- Ambiguity and uncertainty cause high moments of
inertia - tend not to act until confident of what
to do next then often follow standard operating
procedures reinforcing the status quo - Decisions are often based on power
- Return on investment of scarce capital is key to
survival for private organizations - Knowing who pays and who benefits is key to
political success - Conflict in determining responsibility for cost -
public versus private e.g., hospitals
26Organizational decision factors
- Perception of Risk
- Technology
- How reliable the mitigation
- Rate of change of knowledge
- Regulations/standards
- Complexity of retrofit
- Service level requirements
- Construction requirements
- Other requirements
- Hazardous waste management
- Community disruption
- Service quantity and quality
- Union rules
- Financial Capacity / Economy
- Market Conditions
- Availability of Capital
- Debt Capacity
- Liquidity
- Cost of Mitigation
- Occupancy Factors
- Equity
- Distribution of costs and benefits
- Service demands
- Insurance
- Availability, Coverage, Cost
27Mitigation implementation decision grid
a
Sociotechnical system approach Implementation
decision based on integration of sound technical
analysis and stakeholder/organizational values
and decision context Informed process increases
chance of successful mitigation implementation
Empirical approach High degree of technical
analysis / low stakeholder participation
"nerdy analysis without buy-in. Mitigation
implementation success limited when
organizational factors and decision context are
not considered
High
Technical / Engineering Analysis
Political approach Low degree of technical
analysis / high degree of stakeholder
participation "feel good" process without
assurance of technically adequate mitigation
No winners Low degree of technical analysis /
low level of stakeholder participation results
in mitigation deferred to some later time
Low
High
Organizational Participation
28Given this understanding, the problem - solution
context becomes critically important
- Mitigation technology will be implemented when
linked with a strategy that matches the needs of
the sociotechnical environment - A continuous process improvement approach to
mitigation will help recognize and overcome
barriers through collaboration with stakeholders - Biggest challenge one that technology cannot
solve, but must acknowledge the unique context
in which cities decide what and how to regulate
and the context in which organizations make
decisions
29We have learned that
- What appeared to be simple is not context is
critical - Effective approaches are integrative they bridge
disciplines, interests, and scales of analysis - Implementation does not necessarily follow policy
making - Implementation is politics continued by other
means
- Each stakeholder approach is built upon a
particular worldview scientific, technological,
organizational or political - Compromises and mediation among stakeholders is
irrelevant if it is not based on an understanding
of the multiple dimensions of the problem
30Finally, we believe that . . .
- Successful policies and investments for seismic
safety require a worldview that facilitates
integration of the geophysical and technological
with the economic and organizational
-institutional theory and practice - Methods need to be developed to help integrate
across disciplines to better understand systems
of linked geophysical, technological, economic
and institutional processes necessary to increase
the likelihood of successful mitigation
implementation
31What is needed, then, is
- For all participants to develop a respect and
understanding of the perspectives and worldviews
of each others discipline - Recognition that reducing earthquake risk to
lifelines is a complex problem that may require
several alternative solutions, each of which can
lead to new problems - Creation of a process that supports collaboration
among the disciplines and stakeholders involved
-- engineers, scientists, politicians,
organizational decision makers, and property
owners
32To accomplish this, we need design professionals
who will . . .
- Design bridges
- Bridges to help span the gap between disciplines
- Design connections
- Connections to ensure systems that are resilient
when subjected to political and economic stress - Design networks
- Networks that facilitate communication and
understanding
33And.
- Engineer advocates for earthquake mitigation who
understand and acknowledge the interactions
between technology and social processes necessary
to effectively engage in a collaborative
political process
34Multiple Contexts
Political Context
Engineering Technology Context
Organizational Context
Sociotechnical system
Free Market Context
35Thank you for your attention.