Intersectionality and Crisis Management: A Path to Social Equity


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Description

Intersectionality and Crisis Management: A Path to Social Equity aims to embed the social equity discourse into crisis management while exploring the potential of a new tool, the Integrative Crisis Management Model. Leaders and managers navigate a complex and networked environment of policy-making and action, frequently occurring in real time, under constant media exposure. The pervasive availability of this news on all platforms and devices produces a lingering anxiety about the inevitability of danger. Consequently, crisis affords a time-sensitive exploration of management practices and sheds a critical spotlight on deficiencies that may yield novel approaches to doing business.

As the book engages contributing authors who are foremost in their field, it also includes practitioners, students, and junior scholars in a creative new discourse about equity. Bringing these diverse voices together in one volume presents a unique opportunity to generate new insights. Intersectionality provides a framework for understanding how categorizations of people drive social constructs of discrimination and oppression. Each chapter covers a different subject - exploring intersectionality in healthcare, nonprofit management, and human resources - and is accompanied by discussion questions. The book provides something for the classroom, for practitioners, and for scholars who want to include more intersectional thinking into their work.



Author: Hillary J. Knepper
Publisher: Routledge
Published: 01/31/2023
Pages: 128
Binding Type: Hardcover
Weight: 0.71lbs
Size: 8.50h x 5.50w x 0.38d
ISBN13: 9781032026848
ISBN10: 1032026847
BISAC Categories:
- Business & Economics | Human Resources & Personnel Management
- Business & Economics | Management | General
- Business & Economics | Nonprofit Organizations & Charities | Management &Leadership

About the Author

Hillary J. Knepper is a professor in the Department of Public Administration at Pace University, USA.

Michelle D. Evans is an assistant professor in the Department of Political Science and Public Service at the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga, USA.

Tiffany J. Henley is an assistant professor in the Department of Public Administration at Pace University, USA.

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