Critical Infrastructure Disruption and Crisis Management
Critical Infrastructure Disruption and Crisis Management
- Eric SternEric SternCollege of Emergency Preparedness, Homeland Security, and Cybersecurity, University at Albany
- , and Brian NussbaumBrian NussbaumCollege of Emergency Preparedness, Homeland Security and Cybersecurity, University at Albany, State University of New York
Summary
Explicitly considering major critical infrastructure disruptions from the perspective of crisis/crisis management enables policymakers, analysts, and researchers to draw inspiration from an extensive multidisciplinary literature. Furthermore, this approach takes infrastructure failures or disruptions, and provides crucial institutional, economic and social context that is too often ignored when such challenges are treated as exclusively technical problems. The added value from this approach enables analysts and decision makers to understand the complexity of such failures and consider the many levers—technical, economic and social—that might be used to respond to them. Attempts to understand infrastructure failures as crises are not new, but the literature—like the field of practice—is to some extent underdeveloped and continuously evolving (e.g., with regard to the challenges associated with cybersecurity), generating a need for a more comprehensive approach to understanding the leadership tasks associated with the management of such crisis events in dynamic and complex organizational environments.
Subjects
- Policy, Administration, and Bureaucracy
- Political Institutions