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Practice paper

Interactive dependency curves for resilience management

Frédéric Petit, Kelly Wallace and Julia Phillip
Journal of Business Continuity & Emergency Planning, 8 (2), 141-155 (2014)
https://doi.org/10.69554/QLFB7791

Abstract

Physical dependencies are a fundamental consideration when assessing the resilience of an organisation and, ultimately, the resilience of a region. Every organisation needs specific resources for supporting its operations. A disruption in the supply of these resources can severely impact business continuity. It is important to characterise dependencies thoroughly when seeking to reduce the extent an organisation is directly affected by the missions, functions and operations of other organisations. The general protocol when addressing each critical resource is to determine the use for the resource, whether there are redundant services providing the resource, and what protections, backup equipment and arrangements are in place to maintain service. Finally, the criticality of the resource is determined by estimating the time it will take for the facility to experience a severe impact once primary service is lost and what percentage of facility operations can be maintained without backup service in place, as well as identifying whether any external regulations/policies are in place that require shutdown of the facility because of service disruption owing to lack of a critical resource. All of this information can be presented in the form of interactive dependency curves that help anticipate and manage the effect(s) of a disruption on critical resources supply.

Keywords: dependency; resilience; risk management; emergency management; business continuity

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Citation

Petit, Frédéric, Wallace, Kelly and Phillip, Julia (2014, November 1). Interactive dependency curves for resilience management. In the Journal of Business Continuity & Emergency Planning, Volume 8, Issue 2. https://doi.org/10.69554/QLFB7791.

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cover image, Journal of Business Continuity & Emergency Planning
Journal of Business Continuity & Emergency Planning
Volume 8 / Issue 2
© Henry Stewart
Publications LLP

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