Managing for Resilience: Lessons from Ecology

Understanding and developing resilience is becoming increasingly important in business for both leaders and organizations. Resilient organizations can successfully navigate uncertainty and change. Resilience, however, is a poorly understood attribute. We thus turn to ecosystem resilience theory to u...

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Main Authors: Landrum, Nancy E., Dybzinski, Ray, Smajlovic, , Amina, Ohsowski, Brian M.
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Published: Archīum Ateneo 2015
Online Access:https://archium.ateneo.edu/jmgs/vol3/iss1/7
https://archium.ateneo.edu/context/jmgs/article/1044/viewcontent/managing_for_resilience_lessons_from_ecology.pdf
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Institution: Ateneo De Manila University
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spelling ph-ateneo-arc.jmgs-10442023-09-14T09:42:03Z Managing for Resilience: Lessons from Ecology Landrum, Nancy E. Dybzinski, Ray Smajlovic, , Amina Ohsowski, Brian M. Understanding and developing resilience is becoming increasingly important in business for both leaders and organizations. Resilient organizations can successfully navigate uncertainty and change. Resilience, however, is a poorly understood attribute. We thus turn to ecosystem resilience theory to understand the concept of resilience. We identify four lessons that can be adapted from management for ecological resilience to management for business resilience: 1) resilience can be positive or negative depending on the nature of the function it supports, 2) diversity of individuals, departments, flows of information, perspective, and other attributes contributes to resilience, 3) because we have imperfect knowledge about the timing and nature of a given disturbance and thus imperfect knowledge about the exact components of diversity that will promote resilience in the face of it, there is a benefit to preserving diversity, even if it reduces efficiency under static conditions, and 4) to the extent that disturbances are unavoidable, emphasis should be placed on low-level adaptability to support high-level resilience of function. In managing for resilience, the leader can apply these lessons both by promoting diversity (of functional redundancy and response diversity) throughout all levels of the organization and by focusing on development of flexibility, nimbleness, and adaptability. This work has led us to develop seven theoretical propositions on leadership for resilience that can spur further research to integrate ecology and business leadership perspectives. 2015-06-30T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://archium.ateneo.edu/jmgs/vol3/iss1/7 info:doi/10.13185/2244-6893.1044 https://archium.ateneo.edu/context/jmgs/article/1044/viewcontent/managing_for_resilience_lessons_from_ecology.pdf Journal of Management for Global Sustainability Archīum Ateneo
institution Ateneo De Manila University
building Ateneo De Manila University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider Ateneo De Manila University Library
collection archium.Ateneo Institutional Repository
description Understanding and developing resilience is becoming increasingly important in business for both leaders and organizations. Resilient organizations can successfully navigate uncertainty and change. Resilience, however, is a poorly understood attribute. We thus turn to ecosystem resilience theory to understand the concept of resilience. We identify four lessons that can be adapted from management for ecological resilience to management for business resilience: 1) resilience can be positive or negative depending on the nature of the function it supports, 2) diversity of individuals, departments, flows of information, perspective, and other attributes contributes to resilience, 3) because we have imperfect knowledge about the timing and nature of a given disturbance and thus imperfect knowledge about the exact components of diversity that will promote resilience in the face of it, there is a benefit to preserving diversity, even if it reduces efficiency under static conditions, and 4) to the extent that disturbances are unavoidable, emphasis should be placed on low-level adaptability to support high-level resilience of function. In managing for resilience, the leader can apply these lessons both by promoting diversity (of functional redundancy and response diversity) throughout all levels of the organization and by focusing on development of flexibility, nimbleness, and adaptability. This work has led us to develop seven theoretical propositions on leadership for resilience that can spur further research to integrate ecology and business leadership perspectives.
format text
author Landrum, Nancy E.
Dybzinski, Ray
Smajlovic, , Amina
Ohsowski, Brian M.
spellingShingle Landrum, Nancy E.
Dybzinski, Ray
Smajlovic, , Amina
Ohsowski, Brian M.
Managing for Resilience: Lessons from Ecology
author_facet Landrum, Nancy E.
Dybzinski, Ray
Smajlovic, , Amina
Ohsowski, Brian M.
author_sort Landrum, Nancy E.
title Managing for Resilience: Lessons from Ecology
title_short Managing for Resilience: Lessons from Ecology
title_full Managing for Resilience: Lessons from Ecology
title_fullStr Managing for Resilience: Lessons from Ecology
title_full_unstemmed Managing for Resilience: Lessons from Ecology
title_sort managing for resilience: lessons from ecology
publisher Archīum Ateneo
publishDate 2015
url https://archium.ateneo.edu/jmgs/vol3/iss1/7
https://archium.ateneo.edu/context/jmgs/article/1044/viewcontent/managing_for_resilience_lessons_from_ecology.pdf
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