Critical
Incident Analysis is a concept with a history. Previous definitions
evolved from discussions at several universities, based upon cases
that were explored by criminal justice experts, journalists, behavioral
scientists and others with operational and academic responsibilities.
National Centers initiated and supported by the Dart Foundation
have included:
The
interests of sponsors and participants affected the choice of incidents
for analysis and the elements of each incident that were scrutinized.
The process of defining a critical incident was therefore inductive
and subjective, derived from cases that appeared to merit study,
that shared certain characteristics, and that passed an intuitive
threshold for significance.
The
siege and subsequent mass death at Waco was the seminal case. Natural
disasters, catastrophic human errors and acts of terrorism, before
and after Waco, were dissected, debated and examined for multiple
meaning in college classes, expert colloquia and Congressional testimony.
These incidents included the San Francisco earthquake in 1906, the
sinking of the Titanic in 1912, the Exxon Valdez oil spil in 1989l,
Murrah Building bombing in 1995, and the 9/11 attack in 2001.
As
government officials became interested in this emerging field of
interdisciplinary case study, the definition of critical incident
became, almost by design, scripted to the concerns of Western democratic
leaders:
An
event that has the potential for causing social trauma and undermining
social trust, creating fear that may have impact on community
life and even on the practice of democracy. (Critical Incident
Analysis Group at the University of Virginia)
A
relatively brief occurrence involving injury, loss, or conflict
of significant proportion, with the potential to change existing
societal norms. Critical incidents are usually traumatic, threatening
the bonds of trust that bind democracies. (National Center for
Critical Incident Analysis at the National Defense University.)
But
these definitions can be expanded and revised to permit analysis
of positive events, such as the removal of the Berlin Wall and the
first Moon landing. There is good reason to include, in a definition
of critical incidents, episodes in dramatic historic fiction such
as the action of Achilles at Troy.
The
ACIA Symposium participants will be asked to start with the following
conceptual elements of the critical incident:
-
The event is unexpected, at least by those who are not perpetrators
or initiators.
-
There is a consequential impact on many at the time of occurrence.
- The
event and its immediate impact are limited in time and space,
making it an incident or episode rather than a condition –such
as war or poverty or pandemic.
-
There is potential for much larger gain or loss or change, depending
upon the event itself, the actions of those accountable for managing
such incidents, and other important variables, such as the stability
or fragility of the community in which the event occurs.
A model
of critical incident analysis has emerged over 15 years of collaboration,
and the model assists in defining critical incident at the same
time that it depends upon an accepted definition. The model includes
the event itself, the authorized interveners responsible for managing
such events, and the larger community affected by the event. This
larger community may be a nation, an industry or a society with
its various customs and culture. Time-limited incidents rarely have
the power to change a culture, but they often, in retrospect, symbolize
a turning point or epitomize an epoch. The definition and meaning
of critical incident therefore includes not just the event, but
also the behaviors of those at the scene, the context in which it
occurs, and the impact beyond the theater of action.
The
symposium participants will, together, define and redefine critical
incidents as we have collective experience studying the phenomena.
As a tentative, preliminary formulation, based on the clear desire
of faculty to include positive and literary events, and to extend
the purview beyond democratic societies, the following revision
is suggested by Dr. Frank Ochberg:
A
Critical Incident is a relatively brief occurrence involving injury,
loss, conflict, discovery or change of significant proportion,
usually unscripted and unanticipated, with the potential to alter
existing societal norms. Critical incidents are usually traumatic,
threatening the bonds of trust that bind communities, but may
be positive, initiating historic consequents.
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