
Title:
Human Factors Challenges in Emergency Management : Enhancing Individual and Team Performance in Fire and Emergency Services
Author:
Owen, Christine, author.
ISBN:
9781317120315
Edition:
First edition.
Physical Description:
1 online resource : text file, PDF
Contents:
Chapter 1 Human Factors in Emergency Management / chapter 2 Stress and Wildland Firefighter Safety-related Decisions and Actions -- chapter 3 Expert Decision Making and the Use of Worst Case Scenario Thinking -- chapter 4 What Were They Thinking? A Model of Metacognition for Bushfire Fighters -- chapter 5 The Role of Affect in Individual and Collective Performance in a Sociocultural Context -- chapter 6 The Impact of Team Member Familiarity on Performance: Ad hoc and Pre-formed Emergency Service Teams -- chapter 7 Leadership, Communication and Teamwork in Emergency Management -- chapter 8 Firefighter Decision Making at the Local Incident and Regional/State Control Levels -- chapter 9 Coping Ugly: Errors, Decisions, Coping and the Implications for Emergency Management Training -- chapter 10 Creating Cultures of Reflective Learning in the Emergency / chapter 11 The Challenges of Change in Future Emergency Management: Conclusions and Future Developments.
Abstract:
"This book provides an overview of state-of-the-art research that has been conducted within Australia, funded by the Bushfire Cooperative Research Centre. The chapters source and contextualize their own research practice within the context of the international research literature. Therefore, while the research has occurred within Australia it will be of particular interest to scholars, students and practitioners in a number of other countries, particularly within the United States of America and in Europe. The fire and emergency services is a particularly large industry - in Australia alone it employs 250,000 personnel - yet there is very little by way of published human factors books addressing this sector directly. Emergency events frequently involve problems for which there may be unanticipated consequences and highly interdependent consequential effects. In short, emergency events are not necessarily as containable as may be work in other domains. As Karl Weick once commented, emergency events do not 'play by the rules'. This means that these research chapters tell us something about a potential future world of work that is highly dynamic, interdependent and for which improvisation and critical thinking and problem-solving are necessary pre-requisites. The discussions about individual and team performance will also be pertinent to others working in similar high-reliability, high-consequence domains. The chapters connect into an integrated body of work about individual and group performance and their limitations."--Provided by publisher.
Electronic Access:
Taylor & Francis Click here to view.OCLC metadata license agreement http://www.oclc.org/content/dam/oclc/forms/terms/vbrl-201703.pdf
Copies:
Available:*
Library | Material Type | Item Barcode | Shelf Number | Status | Item Holds |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Searching... | E-Book | 547518-1001 | HV551.5 .A8 O946 2017 | Searching... | Searching... |
