Crisis Decision Making
- 1 May 1993
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Administration & Society
- Vol. 25 (1), 12-45
- https://doi.org/10.1177/009539979302500102
Abstract
This essay reconsiders the well-known thesis that, under conditions of crisis, administrative decision making becomes centralized. It discusses the theoretical and administrative underpinnings of this thesis and focuses on the role of small groups in crisis decision making, central government intervention in crisis situations, and crisis government doctrines. Using findings from recent comparative case research in crisis management, alternative patterns of governmental response to crises are outlined. These include formal and informal decentralization, non-decision making, and paralysis. This article concludes with a set of hypotheses that outline the conditions for the emergence of alternative structural patterns in coping with crises and a call for more contingent and reflective thinking about crisis management issues.Keywords
This publication has 40 references indexed in Scilit:
- THE BUREAU‐POLITICS OF CRISIS MANAGEMENTPublic Administration, 1991
- DISASTER CRISIS MANAGEMENT: A SUMMARY OF RESEARCH FINDINGSJournal of Management Studies, 1988
- Management Style and the Organizational MatrixAdministration & Society, 1988
- October 27, 1962: Transcripts of the Meetings of the ExCommInternational Security, 1987
- Documentation: White House Tapes and Minutes of the Cuban Missile CrisisInternational Security, 1985
- Indications, Warning, and Crisis OperationsInternational Studies Quarterly, 1977
- Decision-Making in an International Crisis: Some Biological FactorsInternational Studies Quarterly, 1973
- Cross-Cultural Perspectives on Disaster ResponseAmerican Behavioral Scientist, 1970
- A Framework for the Comparative Analysis of OrganizationsAmerican Sociological Review, 1967
- Some Consequences of Crisis Which Limit the Viability of OrganizationsAdministrative Science Quarterly, 1963