Swans, Swine, and Swindlers addresses a core, contemporary question:
What steps can we take to better anticipate and manage mega-crises, such
as Haiti, Katrina, and 9/11?
This book explores the concept of "messes." A mess is a web of complex
and dynamically interacting, ill-defined, and/or wicked problems; their
solutions; and our conscious and unconscious assumptions, beliefs,
emotions, and values. The roots of messes can be classified as Swans
(the inability to surface and test false assumptions and mistaken
beliefs), Swine (the inability to confront and manage greed, hubris,
arrogance, and narcissism), and Swindlers (the inability to confront,
detect, and stop unethical and corrupt behavior). Working systematically
with this concept and these classifications, authors Can M. Alpaslan and
Ian I. Mitroff reveal that all crises are messes; one must learn to
understand and manage them as such.
They then provide tools and frameworks that readers can use to more
effectively deal with the crises of today and tomorrow. Drawing on ideas
from research areas as diverse as human development, philosophy,
rhetoric, psychology, and high reliability organizations, this book aims
to be the definitive guide for a new era in crisis management.
Therefore, it is a must-have for practitioners, scholars, and students
who study and deal in real-life crises.