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The competing pressures paradigm: A conceptual model for improving emergency and business continuity plans

2nd International Conference on Natural Hazards and Disaster Management

Tony McAleavy

Rabdan Academy, UAE

ScientificTracks Abstracts: J Earth Sci Clim Change

DOI: 10.4172/2157-7617-C2-042

Abstract
Disasters and catastrophes are becoming more frequent and devastating in terms of deaths and financial losses. This requires an ever-vigilant approach to enhancing our preparedness for such eventualities. The two dominant streams of preparedness are the risk and vulnerabilities approaches, which are used in various forms around the world. This paper focuses on emergency and business continuity planning, a staple of the risk-based approach. An applied model for enhancing the effectiveness of all-hazards emergency and business continuity planning is presented. The Competing Pressures Paradigm (CPP) is a conceptual model that combines academic and practitioner best-practice, drawn from emergency and business continuity planning and visual methodology. The diagrammatic model draws out 3 core issues, namely legislative (the Law) and organizational compliance (internal and multi-agency) and managerial preferences (the Boss), which are critical to secure plan sign-off. Planners are required to juggle and more often than not satisfice rather than satisfy, these diverse pressures in order to secure the necessary authorizations. However, meeting these requirements does not guarantee that a plan will work in practice. The CPP encourages greater focus on two critical ancillaries but, sometimes forgotten pressures and pro-active strategizing to address the competing pressures. Firstly, the needs of the plan�s end-user, which can be overlooked whilst, focus on legislative and organizational issues. Compliance requires depth and technical language, rather than an action oriented user-friendly approach that can be readily employed under stress conditions. Secondly, greater focus on the needs of survivors as the primary driver of the planning process which is required to ensure that the life, property and environment ethos is not over-shadowed by other pressures. The CPP promotes critical review of and a proactive approach to management of these five competing pressures to engender more effective planning and ultimately greater response efficacy.
Biography

Tony McAleavy specializes in emergency and disaster management focusing on command and control, multi-agency interoperability and emergency preparedness. He is having experience in the Competing Pressures Paradigm (CPP) as both H M Coastguard and Ambulance Service Officer and within local government emergency management.

E-mail: amcaleavy@ra.ac.ae

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