Continuity and catastrophe: business continuity management and the security of financial operations |
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Authors: | Andreas Folkers |
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Affiliation: | Department for Social Sciences, Institute for Sociology, Goethe-University Frankfurt, Theodor-W.-Adorno-Platz 6, PEG-Building, Post Box 31, Room 3 G 030, 60323, Frankfurt am Main, Germany |
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Abstract: | This paper discusses business continuity management (BCM) and its role in contemporary financial institutions. BCM is a nascent disaster preparedness and recovery strategy that seeks to protect vital business operations from disruptions. The paper traces contemporary BCM back to Cold War continuity of government planning, and shows how BCM came to comprehend security as continuity of processes rather than integrity of goods. BCM is prominent in finance because it promises to mitigate operational risks, and it focuses on risks stemming from interdependencies in financial infrastructures. By engaging with two events that triggered continuity management in banks, Hurricane Sandy in New York City and the ‘Blockupy’ demonstrations in Frankfurt, the paper highlights how BCM is challenged by large-scale disasters as well as acts of public criticism. |
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Keywords: | risk management resilience disaster finance infrastructure politics of temporality |
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