Ian Mitroff

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Ian I. Mitroff (1938)) is an American organizational theorist, consultant and Professor Emeritus at the Marshall School of Business and the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Southern California.

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[edit] Biography

Ian Mitroff studied at the University of California, Berkeley where he received a B.S. in engineering physics, a M.S. in structural engineering, and a Ph.D in industrial engineering.

Mitroff is Professor Emeritus Professor Emeritus from the University of Southern California, where he was the Harold Quinton Distinguished Professor of Business Policy at the Marshall School of Business. Currently a University Professor at Alliant International University in San Francisco. He is also an Adjunct Professor in the School of Public Health at St. Louis University, and Senior Investigator in the Center for Catastrophic Risk Management, University of California Berkeley. He is also the President of the consulting firm Comprehensive Crisis Management. As a lecturer, Mitroff has advised and influenced various academic, corporate, and government leaders in over twenty foreign countries.

Mitroff is a fellow of the American Psychological Association and the Academy of Management, The American Association for the Advancement of Science, and the American Academy of Management. In 1992-1993, he was President of the International Society for the Systems Sciences. In September 2000, he was awarded an Honorary Doctor’s degree from the Faculty of Social Sciences of the University of Stockholm. In September 2006, he was awarded a gold medal by the UK Systems Society for his life-long contributions to systems thinking.

Mitroff is a member of editorial boards in several management and social science journals. He is furter a frequent guest on national radio and TV talk shows including the “Window On Wall Street” (CNN Financial News), the “Dick Cavett Show” (CNBC, New York), “Late Night America” (PBS TV), “Marketplace” (National Public Radio), and “Business Unusual,” (CNN Financial News).

[edit] Work

Mitroff's teaching and research interests are in the field management of organizational crises, spirituality at work and the role of technology at work.[1] He has published in the fields of business policy, Crisis management, Corporate culture, Contemporary media, Current events, Foreign affairs, Nuclear deterrence, Organizational change, Organizational psychology and psychiatry, Philosophy of science, Public policy, Sociology of science, Scientific method, Spirituality in the workplace and Strategic planning.

[edit] USC Center for Crisis Management

In 1986, Mitroff established the USC Center for Crisis Management at the University of Southern California (Los Angeles) in the Graduate School of Business. He was the director of the USC Center for ten years whose purpose was to analyze human-caused crises and create state-of-the-art tools to better manage them.

[edit] Comprehensive Crisis Management

In 1995, he established and became president of a private organization known as Comprehensive Crisis Management. Basically, CCM was a consulting firm that specialized in the treatment of human-caused crises. Mitroff possesses other positions. He is the Associate Director of the USC Center for Strategic Public Relations in the USC Annenberg School for Communication. Also, he is a member of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and is a Fellow of the Academy of Management and the American Psychological Association.

[edit] Center for Catastrophic Risk Management

Mitroff is a Senior Investigator at the Center for Catastrophic Risk Management at the University of California, Berkeley, the principle aim of which is to study human-caused crises and develop state-of-the-art tools to better manage them. Under his direction, the Center has become the acknowledged national and international leader in the field of Crisis Management. [2]

[edit] Publications

He has published over 250 articles and over 25 books. A selection:[3]

  • 1974. The Subjective Side of Science: A Philosophical Inquiry into the Psychology of the Apollo Moon Scientists. Elsevier, Amsterdam (reissued in 1984 by Intersystems Publishers, Seaside, California).
  • 1978. Methodological Approaches to Social Science: Integrating Divergent Concepts and Theories. With Ralph Kilmann. Jossey-Bass, San Francisco.
  • 1981. Challenging Strategic Planning Assumptions, Theory, Cases, and Techniques. With Richard O. Mason. John Wiley, New York.
  • 1982. Creating A Dialectical Social Science: Concepts, Methods, and Models. With Richard O. Mason and D. Reidel. John Wiley, New York.
  • 1983 The 1980 Census: Policymaking Amid Turbulence. With Richard O. Mason and V.P. Barabba. Lexington Books, Massachusetts.
  • 1983. Stakeholders of the Organizational Mind: Toward A New View of Policy Making. Jossey-Bass, San Francisco.
  • 1984. Corporate Tragedies, Product Tampering, Sabotage, and Other Catastrophes. With Ralph Kilmann. Praeger, New York.
  • 1987. Business Not As Usual, Rethinking Our Individual, Corporate, and Industrial Strategies for Global Competition. Jossey-Bass, San Francisco.
  • 1988. Break-Away Thinking, How To Challenge Your Business Assumptions. John Wiley, New York.
  • 1989. The Unreality Industry, The Deliberate Manufacturing of Falsehood and What It Is Doing to Our Lives. With Bennis, Warren. Birch Lane Press, New York.
  • 1990. We're So Big And Powerful Nothing Bad Can Happen To Us: An Investigation of America's Crisis-Prone Corporations. With Thierry Pauchant. Birch Lane Press, New York.
  • 1992. The Unbounded Mind: Breaking the Chains of Traditional Business Thinking. With Harold A. Linstone. Oxford University Press.
  • 1992. Transforming the Crisis-Prone Organization. With Thierry Pauchant. Jossey-Bass, San Francisco.
  • 1993. Crisis Management: A Diagnostic Guide for Improving Your Organization's Crisis-Preparedness. With Christine M. Pearson. Jossey-Bass, San Francisco.
  • 1994. The Challenge of the 21st Century: Managing Technology and Ourselves in a Shrinking World. With Harold A Linstone. State University of New York Press, Albany, New York.
  • 1994. Framebreak: The Radical Redesign of American Business. With Richard O. Mason, and Christine M. Pearson. Jossey-Bass, San Francisco.
  • 1996. The Essential Guide to Managing Corporate Crises.
  • 1998. Smart Thinking for Crazy Times: The Art of Solving the Right Problems. With Christine M. Pearson, and Katharine L. Harrington. Oxford University Press, New York. The Management of Crises and Paradoxes: Preventing the Destructive Effects of Organizations (in French). H.E.C., Montreal, Canada.
  • 1999. A Spiritual Audit of Corporate America: A Hard Look at Spirituality, Religion, and Values in the Workplace. With Elizabeth A. Denton. Jossey-Bass Publishers Inc., San Francisco.
  • 2000. Managing Crises Before They Happen: What Every Executive Needs to Know About Crisis Management. With Gus Anagnos. AMACOM, New York.
  • 2003. Crisis Leadership: Planning for the Unthinkable. John Wiley, New York.
  • 2005. Why Some Companies Emerge Stronger And Better From a Crisis: Seven Essential Lessons For Surviving Disaster. AMACOM, New York.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Ian Mitroff, PhD Professor Marshall Goldsmith School of Management. Retrieved 9 June 2008.
  2. ^ Ian Mitroff. Speaker at The Rapid Planning, Decision Making & Execution Summit. March 6 - 9, 2008. Retrieved 9 June 2008.
  3. ^ He has written articles in journals and newspapers such as the Journal of Industrial Crisis Quarterly, Technological Forecasting and Social Change, Research in Corporate Responsibility, Executive Excellence, the Los Angeles Times, the Journal of Management Studies, the Chicago Sun Times, the International Herald Tribune, and others.

[edit] External links