Uncertainty rules! I guess everybody has heard about the volcano in Iceland and how it has led to the grounding of most air traffic in Western Europe. I read something today asserting that airlines should have plans in place for this kind of thing. What rubbish! Incidents like this cannot be predicted – and as a […]
… a professional’s lament
I read a lot of BCM-related websites, and I am subscribed to too many mailing lists and RSS feeds on the subject. With a lot of the content I just hit the delete key. However when the name Tim Armit comes up on on any of these sources I sit up and pay attention. Tim […]
… non-routine risk and resilience
Recently I have been focusing more on the discipline of risk management. There has been an ongoing debate for many years as to whether BCM is a subset of RM, or vice versa. The current discussions around convergence will probably bring this issue forward yet again. This post will be the first in a series exploring the […]
… perception and CRAP in risk management
Over at the Riskczar blog, Trevor Levine posted some references to the work of John Adams. Professor Adams has been described as Britain’s leading academic expert on risk. He is Emeritus professor of Geography at University College, London. His work was previously unknown to me, but I have found it really interesting and worth sharing. CRAP – […]
… virtual Town Meeting on BCM
Today was the second attempt at this webinar, I posted on the earlier attempt, so have dragged myself out of bed at 05:00 again. The panel consisted of Michael Miora, John Orlando (Norfolk Masters Program) and Linda Nelson (ICOR). The first topic of conversation was the Nathaniel Forbes article (which has appeared everywhere recently). Around […]
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