Key Factors of Organizational Resilience in Prisons and Police Forces in French-Speaking Switzerland during COVID-19
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
2.1. Conceptualizing Organizational Resilience
2.2. Resilience Engineering and Ecological Resilience
2.3. A Third Way between the RE and ER Perspectives
2.4. The Time Dimension of OR
2.5. Operationalization: Resilience Factors
2.6. Research Propositions
- Essential factor No. 1: An anticipatory and proactive organizational culture
- Essential factor No. 2: Information management and communication
- Essential factor No. 3: Leadership practices—liminal leadership
- Essential factor No. 4: Social and environmental practices
- Essential factor No. 5: Governance practices that promote agility
- Essential factor No. 6: Learning capabilities
3. Methodology
4. Results
- Essential factor No. 1: Anticipatory and proactive organizational culture
- Essential factor No. 2: Information management and communication
- Essential factor No. 3: Leadership practices
- Essential factor No. 4: Social and environmental practices
- Essential factor No. 5: Governance practices favoring agility
- Essential factor No. 6: Learning skills
5. Discussion
5.1. Essential Resilience Factors
5.2. Study Limitations
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Variables | Indicators | |||
Organizational hardware | ||||
Resources (t − 1, t) | Materials and structures [10,14,21] | Financial and capital [5,8,10,21] | Technological [8,10] | |
Organizational software | ||||
Knowledge of internal/external environment (t − 1, t, t + 1) | Knowing the operating environment: resources available for ‘minimum operating requirements’ [5,11], p. 92] | Monitor organizational health and vulnerabilities [5,11] | Assess the internal environment: understand the factors that trigger a crisis and identify changes and warning signals [10,11] | Assessing the external environment: understanding crisis triggers and spotting changes and warning signs; learning from adversity [5,10,11,21] |
Leadership (t − 1, t, t + 1) | (t − 1) Anticipation: 1. Deploy resources to promote employee commitment and training, and implement technical measures to anticipate and cope with adversity. 2. Identify problems and early signs of crisis. [8,11,23] | (t − 1, t) Liminal leadership practices 1. Make sense of the environment, interpret it, and realign priorities 2. Promoting relationships 3. Creating meaning and communicating a clear, shared vision 4. Ensure the availability of resources and articulate them appropriately [8,10,11,19,20,23] | (t − 1, t) Complex leadership practices: Profile of facilitators and mediators, recognize complexity and adapt your practice to SAC [3,10,20,23] | (t − 1, t) Inclusive decision-making and social interactions [10,24] |
Organizational culture (t − 1, t) | Anticipation and proactivity: drawing up resilience and risk management plans, exercises, and crisis scenarios [5,8,10,11,19] | See crises as opportunities, especially for learning [5,8,10,19,21,22] | Supporting innovation and creativity: encouraging the sharing of ideas and knowledge (between and within organizations) [5,8,10,11] | Promote agility, improvisation, and internal cooperation [5,8,13,15,25] |
Governance practices (t − 1, t, t + 1) | Robust organizational governance practices (control and stability): 1. Characteristics of centralized structures 2. Strong social relations, notably through frequent interpersonal communication [5,15,24] | Governance practices favoring organizational agility (multiple and fast answers) [8,10,11,25] | ||
Human resources practices (t − 1, t, t + 1) | Recruit the right number of employees with the right skills for the job, and clearly assign roles and responsibilities: Develop high-performance work systems [4,7,8,10,11] | Developing skills and knowledge and recruiting agents with resilient characteristics [4,7,8,10,11] | Promote well-being and, by extension, motivation, and commitment: 1. Encourage the expression of emotions and the sharing of information 2. Deploy adequate resources to meet needs and actively listen to staff [4,10] | Promote workforce diversity: age, gender, education (skills) [8] |
Information management and communication (t − 1, t) | Share information and knowledge inside and outside organizations [4,8,10,11] | Reduce organizational barriers to communication by setting up information and environmental monitoring systems [8,11,20] | ||
Social and environmental practices (t − 1, t, t + 1) | Develop and maintain internal and external social networks and trust for collaborative purposes [4,8,10,11] | Create strong relationships through frequent, interpersonal, pre-shock communications [4,8,10,24] | ||
Resource reserves, varied resources and collateral pathways (t − 1, t) | Have resource reserves to mobilize in an emergency (anticipation for absorption) [8,10,15] | Ensuring access to varied resources (anticipation for adaptation) [15] | Establish collateral pathways: foresee several ways of carrying out the organization’s mission (anticipation for adaptation) [8,10] | |
Learning skills (t + 1) | Analyse and document crisis experiences [8] | Learn from the experience of others through the active exchange of information [8,20] | ||
Organizational change management (t + 1) | Implementing learning through activities of transformation [8,22] | Conveying a renewal discourse by focusing on the future [8] | Cultural transformation: instilling a renewed awareness of risk within the organization [8,20] |
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Internal Channels | Top-Down | Bottom-Up | Horizontal |
---|---|---|---|
Rich media: bilateral or group face-to-face contact (in person or via videoconferencing) | Majority | Majority | Majority |
Rich media: telephone, radio | Several | Minority | Several |
Personal poor media: SMS, WhatsApp groups | Minority | Minority | Ø data |
Personal poor media: e-mails | Several | Minority | Minority |
Impersonal poor media: intranet, newsletter, SharePoint, notice boards, etc. | Majority | Minority | Several |
External channels | Typical partners (intra- andintercantonal) | ||
Rich media: face-to-face or videoconferencing | Majority | ||
Rich media: telephone, radio | Several | ||
Personal poor media: e-mails | Minority (one mention) |
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Giovannini, C.; Giauque, D. Key Factors of Organizational Resilience in Prisons and Police Forces in French-Speaking Switzerland during COVID-19. Merits 2024, 4, 51-65. https://doi.org/10.3390/merits4010004
Giovannini C, Giauque D. Key Factors of Organizational Resilience in Prisons and Police Forces in French-Speaking Switzerland during COVID-19. Merits. 2024; 4(1):51-65. https://doi.org/10.3390/merits4010004
Chicago/Turabian StyleGiovannini, Camille, and David Giauque. 2024. "Key Factors of Organizational Resilience in Prisons and Police Forces in French-Speaking Switzerland during COVID-19" Merits 4, no. 1: 51-65. https://doi.org/10.3390/merits4010004
APA StyleGiovannini, C., & Giauque, D. (2024). Key Factors of Organizational Resilience in Prisons and Police Forces in French-Speaking Switzerland during COVID-19. Merits, 4(1), 51-65. https://doi.org/10.3390/merits4010004