Diplomacy in Times of Disaster: Management through Reputational Capital

Authors

  • Liza Ireni-Saban Interdisciplinary Center (IDC) Herzliya

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33423/jmpp.v20i3.2234

Keywords:

Management, Management Policy, Disaster Diplomacy, Iranian government, earthquake, USAID, Reputational Capital, Iran

Abstract

The 6.6 magnitude quake event that occurred in 2003 (Bam, Iran) made it impossible for the Iranian government to handle disaster relief efforts domestically. In this extreme event, the Iranian government reached out to the international community, and this created a momentum that had to be carried out by trust-building efforts on all sides, often termed "Disaster Diplomacy". This paper suggests that the postdisaster setting may benefit from using the ecology of games framework to evaluate the role of bridging actors and mediators in facilitating collaborative governance networks. Recent developments in network theory and analysis provide means of structural embeddedness to explore how reputational capital can be built through brokerage roles of actors engaged in a disaster management network. This paper then aims to structure the relations among actors that participated in the post-disaster relief efforts in the 2003 Bam earthquake (Iran) in order to assess under which conditions actors may be strategically utilized to serve as mediating organizations for future disaster events experienced by isolated nations or nations in conflict. The results indicate the strategic use of reputational capital by the Iranian Ministry of Foreign Affairs as key broker to build a successful coordinative system for reducing disaster vulnerabilities. International aid agencies rarely played brokerage roles to coordinate peripheral actors. USAID, despite coordination capacities, was prevented from serving brokerage roles in the system.

Downloads

Published

2019-09-10

How to Cite

Ireni-Saban, L. (2019). Diplomacy in Times of Disaster: Management through Reputational Capital. Journal of Management Policy and Practice, 20(3). https://doi.org/10.33423/jmpp.v20i3.2234

Issue

Section

Articles