
In crisis management operations, strategic errors can cost lives. Some international organizations (IOs) learn from these failures whereas others tend to repeat them. Given that they have high rates of turnover, how is it possible that any IO retains knowledge about the past? This book introduces an argument for how and why IOs develop institutional memory from their efforts to manage crises. Findings indicate that the design of an IO's learning infrastructure (e.g. lessons learned offices and databases) can inadvertently disincentivize IO elites from using it to share knowledge about strategic errors. Elites - high-level officials in IOs - perceive reporting to be a risky endeavour. In response, they develop institutional memory by creating and using informal processes, including transnational interpersonal networks, private documentation and conversations during crisis management exercises. The result is an institutional memory that is highly dependent on only a handful of individuals. The book draws on the author's interviews and a survey experiment with 120 NATO elites across four countries. Cases of NATO crisis management in Afghanistan, Libya and Ukraine further illustrate the development of institutional memory. Findings challenge existing research on organizational learning by suggesting that formal learning processes alone are insufficient for ensuring that learning happens. The book also offers recommendations to policymakers for strengthening the learning capacity of IOs.
This book investigates how international organizations (IOs) retain knowledge and learn from past failures despite high staff turnover rates. Heidi Hardt, an expert in international security and organizational behavior, examines the disconnect between formal institutional structures and the actual practices of high-level officials. The central argument posits that formal learning infrastructures often fail because elites perceive them as risky, leading to a reliance on informal, interpersonal networks for knowledge retention.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts identify this work as a significant contribution to the study of organizational behavior within international security institutions. Readers frequently note that the text provides a nuanced, evidence-based critique of formal bureaucratic learning processes.
Page Count:
296
Publication Date:
2018-05-02
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190672188
ISBN-13:
9780190672188
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