
Contemporary societies are increasingly crisis-prone, and crises have profound implications for the rapidly changing political, economic, and social landscape. Crises pose major challenges to governments, communities, leaders, and organizations. The Oxford Encyclopedia of Crisis Analysis provides a comprehensive overview of the rapidly emerging and evolving field of crisis studies and explores its connection to several relevant neighboring fields of knowledge. Crises are complex, unfold in diverse political and socio-technical contexts, and must be studied and understood from multiple angles and disciplinary perspectives. This Encyclopedia brings together contributions by experts from political science, public administration, management, international relations, public health, sociology, economics, media and mass communications, the law, and many other fields to explore important theoretical, methodological, empirical, and practical issues related to crisis and crisis management. Articles focus on concepts (crisis as well as closely related concepts such as emergency, disaster, resilience, security etc.), contingencies (natural hazards, major accidents, pandemics, terrorism, social and political conflict among many others), historical and contemporary cases, classic and cutting edge research methods, different "phases" of the crisis/emergency management cycle, as well as documenting a wide range of pitfalls and good practices that can help to forewarn and forearm current and future crisis managers.The 84 essays in this Encyclopedia fall into six main categories: Theory, Concepts, Metatheory and Methodology, Crisis Governance and Regional Perspectives, Bridging Gaps, and Cases & the Evolving Socio-Technical Context. The Oxford Encyclopedia of Crisis Analysis is a key reference for anyone involved in the study, research, or practice of crisis and emergency analysis and management.
This encyclopedia investigates the multifaceted nature of crises and the evolving frameworks required for effective crisis management in contemporary, complex societies. Eric K. Stern, a scholar in the field of crisis studies, curates this collection of 84 essays from a diverse array of experts across disciplines including public health, law, and management. The work synthesizes theoretical, methodological, and empirical research to provide a comprehensive overview of how governments and organizations navigate emergency scenarios.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts identify this set as a foundational reference for researchers and practitioners seeking a multidisciplinary understanding of crisis dynamics. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which serves as a comprehensive resource for those studying the intersection of governance and emergency management.
Page Count:
1408
Publication Date:
2022-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
019061062X
ISBN-13:
9780190610623
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