风暴正在酝酿:风险易发地区灾害准备的前因

A storm is brewing: Antecedents of disaster preparation in risk prone locations

STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT JOURNAL · 2021
被引 56
人大 AFT50UTD24ABS 4*

中文导读

研究调查了为什么有些公司会为自然灾害做准备而其他公司不会,发现公司自身的灾害经历和向其他组织学习是关键因素,且灾害类型(高频低影响 vs 低频高影响)会影响管理者的学习意愿和风险判断。

Abstract

Abstract Research Summary Research emphasizes the value of disaster preparation and the importance of experience in doing so, yet most companies fail to prepare. The antecedents of preparation are poorly understood, in part, because experience by itself only partly explains the story. To address these concerns, we developed two unique surveys: one from an international survey in 18 disaster‐prone countries and another from a U.S. survey in New York City and Miami. We find that organizational experience with natural disasters increases preparedness for future hazards. Also, organizational learning from other businesses and organiztions positively mediates this relationship. Managers are more willing to learn from others in locations characterized by high‐impact, low‐frequency disasters. In areas with low impact, high frequency disasters, managers more likely misjudge the severity of natural disasters. Managerial Summary Despite the increasing frequency and severity of floods, storms, wildfires and other natural hazards, why do some firms in disaster‐prone areas prepare while others do not? To investigate, we conducted two studies: an international survey in 18 disaster‐prone countries and a U.S. survey in New York City and Miami. In both surveys, managers are more likely to prepare when their companies experienced prior disasters. Managers operating in locations characterized by high‐impact, low‐frequency disasters are more willing to learn from others. In contrast, managers in areas characterized by low impact, high frequency disasters, are more likely to prepare alone. Since effective disaster preparation typically entails working with, and learning from others, those companies that choose a go‐it‐alone strategy may misjudge disaster risk.

自然灾害应急管理组织行为风险管理商业准备