Resilience goes beyond safety and risk management encompassing the ability of organisations to proactively adapt to expected and unexpected situations (crisis, opportunities and changes). The literature on resilience is overwhelming, our systematic literature survey identified 300 different definitions on resilience, diverse developments. Hence, there is a need to translate this fragmented body of knowledge into consolidated practical solutions. The purpose of this paper is to introduce the final version of resilience management guidelines produced in the H2020 DARWIN project. Through a multidisciplinary approach, involving experts in the field of resilience, crisis and risk management and service providers in the Air Traffic Management, healthcare domains as well as representatives from other domains, the DARWIN project has produced evolving resilience management guidelines (DRMG). These guidelines are not prescriptive. Instead they enable organizations to have a critical view on their own crisis management activities. The DRMG are available in different formats for easy usage and maintenance to avoid them being dust-collectors on a shelf. In this way, organizations can adapt, adopt and integrate the guidelines into their own existing management practices and procedures. Through an iterative development process involving academia and practitioners, the guidelines are constructed around Capability Cards (CCs). The evaluation in pilot exercises and other activities involved 247 practitioners from 22 countries explored the possibility to adapt the CCs to the Healthcare and Air Traffic Management domains. It also consider the feasibility of generalizing them to other Critical Infrastructure domains. Our achievement is the current version of guidelines proposing practical interventions that end-users find useful. This paper represents and invitation to explore the content of the guidelines, to encourage its use and further developments of the resilience management.

Herrera, I., Branlat, M., Olav Grøtan, T., Save, L., Ruscio, D., Woltjer, R., Hermelin, J., Feuerle, T., Förster, P., Cohen, O., Cafiero, L., Cedrini, V., Mancini, M., Ferrara, G., Mandarino, G., Rossi, L., Oscar Johnson, C., Morin, E., Resilience management guidelines for critical infrastructures, translating resilience theory into practical and useful interventions, Abstract de <<8th REA Symposium on Resilience Engineering>>, (Kalmar, Sweden, 24-27 July 2019 ), Linnaeus University, Kalmar 2019: 1-2 [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/146417]

Resilience management guidelines for critical infrastructures, translating resilience theory into practical and useful interventions

Ruscio, Daniele
;
2019

Abstract

Resilience goes beyond safety and risk management encompassing the ability of organisations to proactively adapt to expected and unexpected situations (crisis, opportunities and changes). The literature on resilience is overwhelming, our systematic literature survey identified 300 different definitions on resilience, diverse developments. Hence, there is a need to translate this fragmented body of knowledge into consolidated practical solutions. The purpose of this paper is to introduce the final version of resilience management guidelines produced in the H2020 DARWIN project. Through a multidisciplinary approach, involving experts in the field of resilience, crisis and risk management and service providers in the Air Traffic Management, healthcare domains as well as representatives from other domains, the DARWIN project has produced evolving resilience management guidelines (DRMG). These guidelines are not prescriptive. Instead they enable organizations to have a critical view on their own crisis management activities. The DRMG are available in different formats for easy usage and maintenance to avoid them being dust-collectors on a shelf. In this way, organizations can adapt, adopt and integrate the guidelines into their own existing management practices and procedures. Through an iterative development process involving academia and practitioners, the guidelines are constructed around Capability Cards (CCs). The evaluation in pilot exercises and other activities involved 247 practitioners from 22 countries explored the possibility to adapt the CCs to the Healthcare and Air Traffic Management domains. It also consider the feasibility of generalizing them to other Critical Infrastructure domains. Our achievement is the current version of guidelines proposing practical interventions that end-users find useful. This paper represents and invitation to explore the content of the guidelines, to encourage its use and further developments of the resilience management.
2019
Inglese
REA Symposium on Resilience Engineering Embracing Resilience
8th REA Symposium on Resilience Engineering
Kalmar, Sweden
24-lug-2019
27-lug-2019
978-91-88898-41-8
Linnaeus University
Herrera, I., Branlat, M., Olav Grøtan, T., Save, L., Ruscio, D., Woltjer, R., Hermelin, J., Feuerle, T., Förster, P., Cohen, O., Cafiero, L., Cedrini, V., Mancini, M., Ferrara, G., Mandarino, G., Rossi, L., Oscar Johnson, C., Morin, E., Resilience management guidelines for critical infrastructures, translating resilience theory into practical and useful interventions, Abstract de <<8th REA Symposium on Resilience Engineering>>, (Kalmar, Sweden, 24-27 July 2019 ), Linnaeus University, Kalmar 2019: 1-2 [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/146417]
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