The dynamic capabilities approach and regional business resilience: an Australian case study

The frequency and severity of major disruptions (e.g., disasters, epidemics/pandemics) are increasing, significantly impacting business survival in regional areas. Using the dynamic capabilities approach, this paper reports on the recovery pathways and resilience of Australian regional businesses du...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kathyayini Kathy Rao, Catherine Mackenzie, Sudarshan Subedi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2024-12-01
Series:Regional Studies, Regional Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/21681376.2024.2315192
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1850248583235764224
author Kathyayini Kathy Rao
Catherine Mackenzie
Sudarshan Subedi
author_facet Kathyayini Kathy Rao
Catherine Mackenzie
Sudarshan Subedi
author_sort Kathyayini Kathy Rao
collection DOAJ
description The frequency and severity of major disruptions (e.g., disasters, epidemics/pandemics) are increasing, significantly impacting business survival in regional areas. Using the dynamic capabilities approach, this paper reports on the recovery pathways and resilience of Australian regional businesses during the recent COVID-19 pandemic. A case study approach is adopted to explore the capabilities through which regional businesses can plan for, recover from, and develop strategies for building resilience. Using the data from 18 semi-structured interviews with business owners operating in different industry sectors and a web-based forum with 10 key stakeholders in regional South Australia, a dynamic capabilities resilience framework is developed. Results suggest that the dynamic capabilities approach during crises can become integral to the long-term business recovery of regional Australian businesses. By revealing both the determinants of business survival and the constraints regional businesses face during major crises, the study contributes information that businesses, government and non-government agencies that support them can use to develop effective recovery pathways, which is central to the future sustainability of regional Australia.
format Article
id doaj-art-6e3569da24bd4985bf38a94e857e6ba2
institution OA Journals
issn 2168-1376
language English
publishDate 2024-12-01
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
record_format Article
series Regional Studies, Regional Science
spelling doaj-art-6e3569da24bd4985bf38a94e857e6ba22025-08-20T01:58:41ZengTaylor & Francis GroupRegional Studies, Regional Science2168-13762024-12-0111117519110.1080/21681376.2024.2315192The dynamic capabilities approach and regional business resilience: an Australian case studyKathyayini Kathy Rao0Catherine Mackenzie1Sudarshan Subedi2UniSA Business, University of South Australia, Adelaide, AustraliaCentre for Social Impact (CSI), Flinders College of Business, Government and Law, Flinders University, Adelaide, AustraliaDepartment of Community Services, Torrens University of Australia, Adelaide, AustraliaThe frequency and severity of major disruptions (e.g., disasters, epidemics/pandemics) are increasing, significantly impacting business survival in regional areas. Using the dynamic capabilities approach, this paper reports on the recovery pathways and resilience of Australian regional businesses during the recent COVID-19 pandemic. A case study approach is adopted to explore the capabilities through which regional businesses can plan for, recover from, and develop strategies for building resilience. Using the data from 18 semi-structured interviews with business owners operating in different industry sectors and a web-based forum with 10 key stakeholders in regional South Australia, a dynamic capabilities resilience framework is developed. Results suggest that the dynamic capabilities approach during crises can become integral to the long-term business recovery of regional Australian businesses. By revealing both the determinants of business survival and the constraints regional businesses face during major crises, the study contributes information that businesses, government and non-government agencies that support them can use to develop effective recovery pathways, which is central to the future sustainability of regional Australia.https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/21681376.2024.2315192COVID-19Australiaregional businessbusiness resiliencedynamic capabilities
spellingShingle Kathyayini Kathy Rao
Catherine Mackenzie
Sudarshan Subedi
The dynamic capabilities approach and regional business resilience: an Australian case study
Regional Studies, Regional Science
COVID-19
Australia
regional business
business resilience
dynamic capabilities
title The dynamic capabilities approach and regional business resilience: an Australian case study
title_full The dynamic capabilities approach and regional business resilience: an Australian case study
title_fullStr The dynamic capabilities approach and regional business resilience: an Australian case study
title_full_unstemmed The dynamic capabilities approach and regional business resilience: an Australian case study
title_short The dynamic capabilities approach and regional business resilience: an Australian case study
title_sort dynamic capabilities approach and regional business resilience an australian case study
topic COVID-19
Australia
regional business
business resilience
dynamic capabilities
url https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/21681376.2024.2315192
work_keys_str_mv AT kathyayinikathyrao thedynamiccapabilitiesapproachandregionalbusinessresilienceanaustraliancasestudy
AT catherinemackenzie thedynamiccapabilitiesapproachandregionalbusinessresilienceanaustraliancasestudy
AT sudarshansubedi thedynamiccapabilitiesapproachandregionalbusinessresilienceanaustraliancasestudy
AT kathyayinikathyrao dynamiccapabilitiesapproachandregionalbusinessresilienceanaustraliancasestudy
AT catherinemackenzie dynamiccapabilitiesapproachandregionalbusinessresilienceanaustraliancasestudy
AT sudarshansubedi dynamiccapabilitiesapproachandregionalbusinessresilienceanaustraliancasestudy