Project Resilience: The Art of Noticing, Interpreting, Preparing, Containing and Recovering

Elmar Kutsch, Mark Hall, Neil Turner

Research output: Book/ReportBook

Abstract

Project Resilience is about making projects and project managers more resilient. The authors look at projects not simply from a ‘mechanistic’ approach in which work can be broken down, executed and controlled as a series of interlocking parts but rather as ‘organic’ constructs, living entities existing for a finite period of time, consisting of people, structures and processes. These entities are constantly challenged by environmental adversity - risk, uncertainty and complexity. Resilience involves finding ways to help project managers notice more, interpret adversity more realistically, prepare themselves better for it, contain and recover from it quicker and more appropriately.

The book has two purposes: it offers a glimpse into our tendencies to be irrational in the face of adversity: risk, uncertainty and complexity. The second purpose is to offer a new perspective to aid in managing risky, and in particular uncertain and complex projects. The authors go beyond commonly-accepted standards in project management with the aim of providing an understanding of how to implement project-wide resilience. The purpose is to guide, not to prescribe. It is best used as a trigger for a thinking process to define your own unique approach to managing uncertainty, not to replace your experience and judgement. Ultimately, it has been written to challenge traditional wisdom in project management, and to address the rationale for creative best practices.
Original languageEnglish
Place of PublicationFarnham
PublisherGower Publishing Ltd
Number of pages236
Edition1st
ISBN (Electronic)9781315602455
ISBN (Print)9781472423634
Publication statusPublished - 28 Oct 2015

Keywords

  • organizational resilience
  • Project Management

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Project Resilience: The Art of Noticing, Interpreting, Preparing, Containing and Recovering'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this