Enhancing security and continuity management at international airports


Autoria(s): Barnes, Paul H.; Sinclair, Natalie
Data(s)

2010

Resumo

Operators of busy contemporary airports have to balance tensions between the timely flow of passengers, flight operations, the conduct of commercial business activities and the effective application of security processes. In addition to specific onsite issues airport operators liaise with a range of organisations which set and enforce aviation-related policies and regulations as well as border security agencies responsible for customs, quarantine and immigration, in addition to first response security services. The challenging demands of coordinating and planning in such complex socio-technical contexts place considerable pressure on airport management to facilitate coordination of what are often conflicting goals and expectations among groups that have standing in respect to safe and secure air travel. What are, as yet, significantly unexplored issues in large airports are options for the optimal coordination of efforts from the range of public and private sector participants active in airport security and crisis management. A further aspect of this issue is how airport management systems operate when there is a transition from business-as-usual into an emergency/crisis situation and then, on recovery, back to ‘normal’ functioning. Business Continuity Planning (BCP), incorporating sub-plans for emergency response, continuation of output and recovery of degraded operating capacity, would fit such a context. The implementation of BCP practices in such a significant high security setting offers considerable potential benefit yet entails considerable challenges. This paper presents early results of a 4 year nationally funded industry-based research project examining the merger of Business Continuity Planning and Transport Security Planning as a means of generating capability for improved security and reliability and, ultimately, enhanced resilience in major airports. The project is part of a larger research program on the Design of Secure Airports that includes most of the gazetted ‘first response’ international airports in Australia, key Aviation industry groups and all aviation-related border and security regulators as collaborative partners. The paper examines a number of initial themes in the research, including: ? Approaches to integrating Business Continuity & Aviation Security Planning within airport operations; ? Assessment of gaps in management protocols and operational capacities for identifying and responding to crises within and across critical aviation infrastructure; ? Identification of convergent and divergent approaches to crisis management used across Austral-Asia and their alignment to planned and possible infrastructure evolution.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/40188/

Publicador

International Research Society for Public Management

Relação

http://www.irspm.net/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=63%3Afourteenth-annual-conference-of-the-international-research-society-for-public-management-irspm-xiv&Itemid=104&showall=1

Barnes, Paul H. & Sinclair, Natalie (2010) Enhancing security and continuity management at international airports. In Proceedings of 14th Annual Conference of the International Research Society for Public Management (IRSPMXIV), International Research Society for Public Management, Bern, Switzerland.

http://purl.org/au-research/grants/ARC/LP0990135

Direitos

Copyright 2010 please consult the authors

Fonte

QUT Business School; School of Management

Palavras-Chave #150399 Business and Management not elsewhere classified #Security #Continuity Management #International Airports
Tipo

Conference Paper