Local officials in the emergency management field have reached out and increased their connections with other agencies and organizations during the past several years. Collaborative networks have been created in an effort to address the complexities and uncertainties surrounding extreme events. But has this collaboration really taken root? In this article, the authors find that although a collaborative ethos has penetrated local emergency management, it is neither deep nor uniform. Data from a survey of emergency managers in North Carolina counties show that maintaining a functional network—a performance regime in which participants develop consistent management practices and rely on each other for the generation of new ideas—is a difficult task. The explanation for the variation found across the counties largely involves capacity and vulnerability.
Publication Information
Bowman, Ann, and Bryan Parsons. 2012. "Making Connections: Performance Regimes and Extreme Events." Public Administration Review (November): 63-73. http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1540-6210.2012.02680.x/full