ebooks logo journals logo reference works logo abstract databases logo
bullet  SIGN IN Register | Why Register? | Got a Voucher? alerts   marked lists   shopping cart 

informaworld

HOME   |   SEARCH   |   BROWSE
    Issues List       Latest Issue       Volume 8 Issue 3       Subscribe       Article       References       Cited By       Related articles      
firstfirst   < prevprev   Table of contentstoc   next >next   last >>last
Publisher Logo Publication Cover
Search within this journal
iFirst
Coming soon to this journal
iOpen

The institutional origins of risk: A new agenda for risk research 

Author: Henry Rothstein a
Affiliation:   a London School of Economics and Political Science, UK
DOI: 10.1080/13698570600871646
Publication Frequency: 6 issues per year
Published in: journal Health, Risk & Society, Volume 8, Issue 3 September 2006 , pages 215 - 221
Formats available: HTML (English) : PDF (English)
Article Requests: Order Reprints : Request Permissions


Abstract

The emergence of risk as an organizing concept for regulation and governance has been the subject of considerable comment and debate, most notably in relation to Ulrich Beck's Risk Society thesis. This editorial, however, argues that contemporary preoccupations with risk are driven less by a changing distribution of real, or imagined, ills in society, than by a changing distribution of ills in governance. It argues that the inevitable difficulty of managing threats to society (societal risks) creates threats to organizations managing those risks (institutional risks). The potential for failure has always been part of governance, but contemporary pressures towards greater coherence, transparency and accountability have amplified institutional risks by exposing the practical limits of governance. Framing the objects of governance in terms of risk, however, provides a way of reflexively managing the associated institutional threats by explicitly anticipating the practical limits of governance within probabilistic calculations of success and failure. This editorial outlines how the institutional dynamics of contemporary governance can lead to a phenomenon of 'risk colonization', whereby risk increasingly comes to define the object, methods and rationale of governance. It then goes on to consider some of the possible positive and negative consequences of risk colonization and concludes by suggesting ways in which the study of institutional risk can help us understand the relationship between risk and governance.
Keywords: Societal and institutional risk; risk-based regulation; governance; risk colonization
view references (23) : view citations
Bookmark with:
  • CiteULike
  • Del.icio.us
  • BibSonomy
  • Connotea
  • More bookmarks
Privacy Policy | Terms & Conditions | Accessibility | RSS
FAQs in: English . Français . Español . 中文(简体和繁體)
© 2009 Informa plc