Please click on the links below
to access the following information:
- Workshop
invitation
- Instructions
on how to reach the venue
- Workshop
agenda
- Workshop sessions readings
- Session 1 Readings:
Best
practice in risk management: A function comes of age; A report
from the Economist Intelligence Unit, Feb. 2007.
The
collapse of sensemaking in organizations: The Mann Gulch disaster,
Weick, K.E., Administrative Science Quarterly, 38(4), Dec. 1993.
- Session 2 Readings:
Perspective:
Bringing Back Best Practices in Risk Management - Banks’ Three
Lines Of Defense, Booz & Co., Nov. 2008.
Lessening
the Impact of Disasters, Cutter, S.L., American Scientist, 96(2),
170 – 171, March – April, 2008.
- Session 3 Readings:
Taking
improbable events seriously: An interview with the author of The
Black Swan, The McKinsey Quarterly, Dec. 2008.
Human
error: models and management, Reason, J., BMJ, Vol. 320, pp.
768 – 770, March 2000.
- Sessions debriefing Reading:
Dealing
with Predictable Irrationality – Actuarial Ideas to Strengthen
Global Financial Risk Management (only page 7 is required),
International Actuarial Association, Feb. 2009.
- Session 4 Readings:
Risk
Management Professional Growth Model, Risk and Insurance Management
Society, Inc., NY, 2008.
Five
System Barriers to Achieving Ultrasafe Health Care, Amalberti,
R., Auroy, Y., Berwick, D. and Barach, P, Annals of Internal Medicine,
142(9), 756 – 764, May 2005.
- Supplementary materials
- “Global
Risks 2008: A Global Risk Network Report”,World
Economic Forum, Jan. 2008
- “Global
Risks 2009: A Global Risk Network Report”, World
Economic Forum, Jan. 2009
- “Risk
Management Failures: What Are They and When Do They Happen?”,
Stulz, R.M., Charles A. Dice Center for Research in Financial Economics,
Fisher College of Business Working Paper Series, Oct. 2008.
- The
Mann Gulch Disaster
- Is
Complexity Interlinked With Disaster? Ask on Jan. 1; A Theory of Risk
and Technology Is Facing a Millennial Test, Zuckerman,
L., The New York Times, Dec. 11th, 1999.*
*Excerpts from Charles Perrow’s book, “Normal
Accidents: Living with High-Risk Technologies”, on which
Zuckerman’s article is based, can be previewed here.
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