Publication | Open Access
Systems that Should Have Failed: Critical Infrastructure Protection in an Institutionally Fragmented Environment
220
Citations
38
References
2007
Year
EngineeringCritical Infrastructure ProtectionInfrastructure ManagementBureaucracyReliability EngineeringInstitutional RestructuringCritical InfrastructureRisk ManagementCritical SystemPublic PolicyInfrastructure SystemInfrastructure SafetyInfrastructure SecurityNormal Accident TheoryInfrastructure DevelopmentInfrastructure System Of SystemsCivil EngineeringInstitutionally Fragmented EnvironmentInfrastructure ResilienceSecurityCrisis ManagementInfrastructure SystemsDisaster Risk Reduction
Recent years have witnessed major governmental initiatives regarding critical infrastructure protection (CIP). During that same time, critical infrastructures (CIs) have undergone massive institutional restructuring under the headings of privatization, deregulation and liberalization. Little research has gone into understanding the interactions between these two developments. In this article, we outline the consequences of institutional restructuring for the changing ways in which CIs ensure the reliability and security of their networks and services. Neither Normal Accident Theory nor High‐Reliability Theory can account for reliability under these conditions. We then investigate the implications of these findings for CIP.
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