Resilience engineering in practice a guidebook
Resilience engineering has since 2004 attracted widespread interest from industry as well as academia. Practitioners from various fields, such as aviation and air traffic management, patient safety, off-shore exploration and production, have quickly realised the potential of resilience engineering a...
Other Authors: | |
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Format: | eBook |
Language: | Inglés |
Published: |
Farnham, Surrey, England ; Burlington, VT :
Ashgate
2010.
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Edition: | 1st edition |
Series: | Ashgate studies in resilience engineering.
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Subjects: | |
See on Biblioteca Universitat Ramon Llull: | https://discovery.url.edu/permalink/34CSUC_URL/1im36ta/alma991009628100306719 |
Table of Contents:
- Cover; Contents; List of Figures; List of Tables; List of Contributors; Prologue: The Scope of Resilience Engineering by Erik Hollnagel; PART I Dealing with the Actual; Chapter 1 Resilience and the Ability to Respond; Chapter 2 Lessons from the Hudson; Chapter 3 Coping with Uncertainty. Resilient Decisions in Anaesthesia; Chapter 4 Training Organisational Resilience in Escalating Situations; PART II Dealing with the Critical; Chapter 5 Monitoring - A Critical Ability in Resilience Engineering; Chapter 6 From Flight Time Limitations to Fatigue Risk Management Systems - A Way Toward Resilience
- Chapter 7 Practices for Noticing and Dealing with the Critical. A Case Study from MaintenanceChapter 8 Cognitive Strategies in Emergency and Abnormal Situations Training; PART III Dealing with the Potential; Chapter 9 Resilience and the Ability to Anticipate; Chapter 10 Basic Patterns in How Adaptive Systems Fail; Chapter 11 Measuring Resilience in the Planning of Rail Engineering Work; Chapter 12 The Art of Balance: Using Upward Resilience Traits to Deal with Conflicting Goals; Chapter 13 The Importance of Functional Interdependencies in Financial Services Systems
- PART IV Dealing with the FactualChapter 14 To Learn or Not to Learn, that is the Question; Chapter 15 No Facts, No Glory; Chapter 16 From Myopic Coordination to Resilience in Socio-technical Systems; Chapter 17 Requisites for Successful Incident Reporting in Resilient Organisations; Chapter 18 Is the Aviation Industry Ready for Resilience? Mapping Human Factors Assumptions; Epilogue: RAG - The Resilience Analysis Grid by Erik Hollnagel; Bibliography; Author Index; Subject Index