Disjointed modes of building resilience to socio-environmental crises

Socio-environmental crises are bound to worsen and bring about unprecedented uncertainties regarding their anticipation and management. We studied how public organizations in Finland build resilience to such crises (that is, the capacity needed to deal with and recover from disruptions) and how and...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Anna Salomaa, Tapio Reinekoski, Henna Salminen, Kelsey Krivochenitser, Janne I Hukkinen, Turo-Kimmo Lehtonen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2025-03-01
Series:Ecology and Society
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol30/iss1/art6
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1850275309455147008
author Anna Salomaa
Tapio Reinekoski
Henna Salminen
Kelsey Krivochenitser
Janne I Hukkinen
Turo-Kimmo Lehtonen
author_facet Anna Salomaa
Tapio Reinekoski
Henna Salminen
Kelsey Krivochenitser
Janne I Hukkinen
Turo-Kimmo Lehtonen
author_sort Anna Salomaa
collection DOAJ
description Socio-environmental crises are bound to worsen and bring about unprecedented uncertainties regarding their anticipation and management. We studied how public organizations in Finland build resilience to such crises (that is, the capacity needed to deal with and recover from disruptions) and how and why their efforts appear dysfunctional in the face of worsening crises. Our data-driven qualitative analysis draws on interviews with 58 experts in Finnish public organizations in different fields of service provision. We find that resilience is built in three distinct yet interacting modes: Mode 1, as operational action and readiness; Mode 2, as prevention and planning; and Mode 3, as exploring and sketching the unknown. These modes are distinguishable from one another by features such as severity of disruptions, temporal scales of operation, degrees of uncertainty, actionability of measures and attribution of responsibilities, and ways of knowing the future. Based on our analysis of how the modes interact, we diagnose a mutual disconnect between Modes 2 and 3. The demands that the latter imposes on planning and modeling find little grounding in current practices in Finnish public organizations. Conversely, operations in Mode 1 and Mode 2 can be so institutionally locked in that they end up constraining the ability to account for and adapt to any threats beyond tried-and-true methods. It is this disjointedness that, we suggest, permits socio-environmental crises to creep in. We encourage scholars and practitioners to inquire into and identify similar disconnects that can turn aspirations for resilience in organizational practices against themselves. Not only could this elucidate the different kinds of efforts to build resilience in and across governance domains, but it would also help identify whether established practices are able to incorporate uncertainties that can be conjectured but not known for certain.
format Article
id doaj-art-dc1a02403b3e42d6a60c46a00b040dc8
institution OA Journals
issn 1708-3087
language English
publishDate 2025-03-01
publisher Resilience Alliance
record_format Article
series Ecology and Society
spelling doaj-art-dc1a02403b3e42d6a60c46a00b040dc82025-08-20T01:50:48ZengResilience AllianceEcology and Society1708-30872025-03-01301610.5751/ES-15766-30010615766Disjointed modes of building resilience to socio-environmental crisesAnna Salomaa0Tapio Reinekoski1Henna Salminen2Kelsey Krivochenitser3Janne I Hukkinen4Turo-Kimmo Lehtonen5Unit of Social Research, Faculty of Social Sciences, Tampere University, FinlandUnit of Social Research, Faculty of Social Sciences, Tampere University, FinlandUnit of Social Research, Faculty of Social Sciences, Tampere University, FinlandUnit of Social Research, Faculty of Social Sciences, Tampere University, FinlandFaculty of Social Sciences, Faculty of Biological and Environmental Sciences, and Faculty of Agriculture and Forestry, University of HelsinkiUnit of Social Research, Faculty of Social Sciences, Tampere University, FinlandSocio-environmental crises are bound to worsen and bring about unprecedented uncertainties regarding their anticipation and management. We studied how public organizations in Finland build resilience to such crises (that is, the capacity needed to deal with and recover from disruptions) and how and why their efforts appear dysfunctional in the face of worsening crises. Our data-driven qualitative analysis draws on interviews with 58 experts in Finnish public organizations in different fields of service provision. We find that resilience is built in three distinct yet interacting modes: Mode 1, as operational action and readiness; Mode 2, as prevention and planning; and Mode 3, as exploring and sketching the unknown. These modes are distinguishable from one another by features such as severity of disruptions, temporal scales of operation, degrees of uncertainty, actionability of measures and attribution of responsibilities, and ways of knowing the future. Based on our analysis of how the modes interact, we diagnose a mutual disconnect between Modes 2 and 3. The demands that the latter imposes on planning and modeling find little grounding in current practices in Finnish public organizations. Conversely, operations in Mode 1 and Mode 2 can be so institutionally locked in that they end up constraining the ability to account for and adapt to any threats beyond tried-and-true methods. It is this disjointedness that, we suggest, permits socio-environmental crises to creep in. We encourage scholars and practitioners to inquire into and identify similar disconnects that can turn aspirations for resilience in organizational practices against themselves. Not only could this elucidate the different kinds of efforts to build resilience in and across governance domains, but it would also help identify whether established practices are able to incorporate uncertainties that can be conjectured but not known for certain.https://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol30/iss1/art6anticipationclimate changefuturepolycrisispreparednessresilience
spellingShingle Anna Salomaa
Tapio Reinekoski
Henna Salminen
Kelsey Krivochenitser
Janne I Hukkinen
Turo-Kimmo Lehtonen
Disjointed modes of building resilience to socio-environmental crises
Ecology and Society
anticipation
climate change
future
polycrisis
preparedness
resilience
title Disjointed modes of building resilience to socio-environmental crises
title_full Disjointed modes of building resilience to socio-environmental crises
title_fullStr Disjointed modes of building resilience to socio-environmental crises
title_full_unstemmed Disjointed modes of building resilience to socio-environmental crises
title_short Disjointed modes of building resilience to socio-environmental crises
title_sort disjointed modes of building resilience to socio environmental crises
topic anticipation
climate change
future
polycrisis
preparedness
resilience
url https://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol30/iss1/art6
work_keys_str_mv AT annasalomaa disjointedmodesofbuildingresiliencetosocioenvironmentalcrises
AT tapioreinekoski disjointedmodesofbuildingresiliencetosocioenvironmentalcrises
AT hennasalminen disjointedmodesofbuildingresiliencetosocioenvironmentalcrises
AT kelseykrivochenitser disjointedmodesofbuildingresiliencetosocioenvironmentalcrises
AT janneihukkinen disjointedmodesofbuildingresiliencetosocioenvironmentalcrises
AT turokimmolehtonen disjointedmodesofbuildingresiliencetosocioenvironmentalcrises