Sub-theme 27: Risk, Crisis and Emergency Management
Call for Papers
Organizational crises and risks cross important boundaries and domains, unfold in unanticipated ways, and impact widely
dispersed people, organizations and societies. Recent crises such as the Eurozone financial crisis and the Fukushima Daiichi
nuclear disaster show how crises breach critical infrastructures and create dangerous bridges that transport risks to geographically
distant places and peoples. The results "can be devastatingly high" for organizations, individuals and societies (Pearson
et al., 2007: vii).
This sub-theme advances knowledge of how organizational stakeholders experience and understand
transboundary organizational crises. Past research (Gephart Van Maanen & Oberlechner, 2009) has shown that risks and crises
tend to cross key national and political boundaries (Boin et al., 2005). Now, we need to gain nuanced and insightful knowledge
of how individuals and collectives experience transboundary crises. And we need to provide stronger conceptualizations of
boundaries in order to understand crises well enough to offer meaningful advice to those charged with crisis regulation and
management.
Boundaries are thus an important focus for study. Boundaries are conceived in physical, temporal
or spatial terms as complex, socially constructed, and negotiated entities that constitute, constrain, and enable organizations
(Heracleous, 2004). Boundaries include cultural and symbolic boundaries that separate purity and danger (Douglas, 1966) and
conceptually defined boundaries including efficiency, power, competence and identity (Santos & Eisenhardt, 2005). We seek
papers that conceptualize boundaries in new ways, explore how boundaries are breached and bridged in crises, and provide insights
into how boundary management influences crisis response and survival.
We also need deeper conceptual and empirical
insights into the breaching and bridging that occurs across and through boundaries. "Breach" (a verb) means to break through,
to go beyond, to quarrel and separate and (as a noun) refers to a break in an unfilled obligation, an infringement upon something,
or an injurious inroad (Oxford English Dictionary, 2011). Transboundary crises and risks could be explored as phenomena that
breach social order, disrupt physical systems, bring about injuries and break things.
In contrast, a bridge joins
together places, cultures, perspectives, concepts, and other elements. Risk thinking can be a bridge to join things together
(Mythen, 2008: 301). Bridging could be explored as a useful process where connections facilitate solutions to problems or
as a harmful process where connections transport harms to new locales.
We encourage conceptual and empirical
papers that explore the nature and role of boundaries in management of risks and crises, the forms of breaching and bridging
that occur, and the effects of different types of breaches and bridges. And we encourage papers that use qualitative and/or
quantitative methods.
The following questions illustrate sub-theme issues.
- How can one usefully conceptualize boundaries (Santos & Eisenhardt, 2005; Heracleous, 2004) to understand how organizational crises and risks are experienced by individuals and collectives?
- Which boundaries are important for managing organizational crises and risks? Does the pattern of importance differ across different types of crisis?
- Which boundaries are likely to be breached or bridged in organizational crises and risks, and how? What are the micro-foundations and underlying mechanisms of breaching and bridging? Which existing theories are most useful to understanding these phenomena?
- Who benefits from breaches and bridges in transboundary crises and who loses?
- Which levels of analysis are most important: individual, group, organization or nation?
References
Boin, Arjen, Paul t'Hart, Eric Stern & Bengt Sundelius (2005): The Politics of Crisis Management: Public Leadership under Pressure. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Douglas, M. (1966): Purity and Danger: An analysis of Concepts of Pollution and Taboo. London, UK: Routledge.
Gephart, Robert P., John Van Maanen & Thomas Oberlechner (2009): 'Organizations and risk in late modernity.' Organization Studies, 30 (2 & 3), 141–156.
Heracleous, Loizos (2004): 'Boundaries in the study of organizations.' Human Relations, 57, 95–103.
Mythen, Gabe (2008): 'Sociology and the art of risk.' Sociology Compass, 2 (1), 299–316.
Oxford English Dictionary (2011), retrieved from www.oed.com/view/Entry/2280 on December 8, 2011.
Pearson, Christine, Christophe Roux-Dufort & Judith Clair (2007): 'Introduction.' In: C. Pearson, C. Roux-Dufort & J. Clair (eds.): International Handbook of Organizational Crisis Management. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage, vii–xi.
Santos, Filipe & Kathleen Eisenhardt (2005): 'Organizational boundaries and theories of organization.' Organization Science, 16 (5), 491–508.