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Terrorism and critical infrasctructures : implications for public-private crisis management

By: BOIN, Arjen.
Contributor(s): SMITH, Denis.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticlePublisher: Oxford, UK : Blackwell, November 2006Public Money & Management : integrating theory and practice in public management 26, 5, p. 295-305Abstract: The spate of terrorist attacks in New York, London and Madrid has raised some significant issues for the public management of critical infrastructures. In many countries, privatizations in the 1980s and 1990s have transferred key elements of the critical infrastructure to private companies. Because these infrastructures are of major significance to our societies and economies, they must be protected against prolonged periods of breakdown. The 'new' terrorism has the potential to do just that. The management of this new threat is a complex task, which invariably will be undertaken by both public and private actors. They must deal with the core challenges of the prevention of attacks, effective communication of information across organizational boundaries and the 'ownership' of crisis decision-making. This article considers these issues within the context of the broader research areas of public management and crisis management
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The spate of terrorist attacks in New York, London and Madrid has raised some significant issues for the public management of critical infrastructures. In many countries, privatizations in the 1980s and 1990s have transferred key elements of the critical infrastructure to private companies. Because these infrastructures are of major significance to our societies and economies, they must be protected against prolonged periods of breakdown. The 'new' terrorism has the potential to do just that. The management of this new threat is a complex task, which invariably will be undertaken by both public and private actors. They must deal with the core challenges of the prevention of attacks, effective communication of information across organizational boundaries and the 'ownership' of crisis decision-making. This article considers these issues within the context of the broader research areas of public management and crisis management

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