研究明天的危机:方法论创新与更广泛的影响

Researching Tomorrow's Crisis: Methodological Innovations and Wider Implications

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MANAGEMENT REVIEWS · 2012
被引 146
人大 A-ABS 3

中文导读

通过一个六阶段事件序列框架,综述了极端事件研究的方法论创新,并指出这些方法可为主流组织与管理研究带来新见解。

Abstract

The incidence and impact of crises, disasters and other extreme events appears to be increasing, thus heightening the significance of crisis research. The nature of such events – sudden, inconceivable, damaging, sensitive, unique – has encouraged unconventional methodological perspectives and practices. A review of these developments is timely. This article presents a bounded, temporally bracketed overview of the literatures exploring extreme events, structured around an ‘ideal type’ event sequence with six phases: incubation period, incident, crisis management, investigation, organizational learning and implementation of ‘lessons learned’. While not a traditional review, this approach serves to overcome problems associated with phenomena resistant to precise definition, and maps the structure of a field characterized by fragmentation, insular traditions and epistemological pluralism, generating a template against which crises can be explored. Crisis research appears to have overcome the problems associated with relying on retrospective research designs, accessing sensitive data, addressing novel ethical concerns, developing multi‐level explanations and using single case studies to develop generalizable theory. The wider adoption of these approaches in ‘mainstream’ organization and management studies may prompt innovation and fresh insights in other areas, particularly where the temporal structure of events, the role of slow‐moving causes, and conjunctural reasoning, play significant roles.

危机管理组织研究方法论管理学