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photo credits: Wikimedia Commons
Risk management is the identification, evaluation, and prioritization of risks, followed by the minimization, monitoring, and control of the impact or probability of those risks occurring. Risks can come from various sources (i.e, threats) including uncertainty in international markets, political instability, dangers of project failures (at any phase in design, development, production, or sustaining of life-cycles), legal liabilities, credit risk, accidents, natural causes and disasters, deliberate attack from an adversary, or events of uncertain or unpredictable root-cause. There are two types of events wiz. Risks and Opportunities. Negative events can be classified as risks while positive events are classified as opportunities. Risk management standards have been developed by various institutions, including the Project Management Institute, the National Institute of Standards and Technology, actuarial societies, and International Organization for Standardization. Methods, definitions and goals vary widely according to whether the risk management method is in the context of project management, security, engineering, industrial processes, financial portfolios, actuarial assessments, or public health and safety. Certain risk management standards have been criticized for having no measurable improvement on risk, whereas the confidence in estimates and decisions seems to increase. Strategies to manage threats (uncertainties with negative consequences) typically include avoiding the threat, reducing the negative effect or probability of the threat, transferring all or part of the threat to another party, and even retaining some or all of the potential or actual consequences of a particular threat. The opposite of these strategies can be used to respond to opportunities (uncertain future states with benefits). As a professional role, a risk manager will "oversee the organization's comprehensive insurance and risk management program, assessing and identifying risks that could impede the reputation, safety, security, or financial success of the organization", and then develop plans to minimize and / or mitigate any negative (financial) outcomes. Risk Analysts support the technical side of the organization's risk management approach: once risk data has been compiled and evaluated, analysts share their findings with their managers, who use those insights to decide among possible solutions. See also Chief Risk Officer, internal audit, and Financial risk management § Corporate finance. Source: Wikipedia (en)
Works about risk management 33
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Long-term Planning, Climate Change and Sea Level Rise
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Risk: perceptions and management responses in a dryland farming system
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Farm planning under risk : an application of the captial asset pricing model to New Zealand agriculture
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Quantification of the risk associated with the seasonal financing of agricultural production
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Taking the plunge : assessing and managing risks in adventure tourism in the lower North Island, New Zealand
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Being safe & taking risks : how a group of nurses managed children's pain
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Teachers talking about their epics : near misses in outdoor education
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Risk management in agriculture : Argentine evidence of perceived sources of risk, risk management strategies and risk efficiency in rice farming
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An investigation into the use of discounted cash flow techniques for predicting the risk/return trade-off for residential subdivisions
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Assessing tail-related risk for heteroscedastic return series of Asian emerging equity markets
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Portfolio risk diversification, coherent risk measures and risk mapping, risk contribution analysis and the setting of risk limits
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Risk management and extreme scenario development using multiple regime switching approaches
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Ensuring Uncertainty? The International Political Economy of Over-The-Counter Derivatives Trading
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Do cross listed securities in the face of extreme events present any risk return benefits for New Zealand investors?
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Extending value at risk to a corporate setting : an application to Fonterra Cooperative
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Sports events and risk management in New Zealand: How safe is safe enough?
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Risk in New Zealand dairy farming : perception and management
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Risk Management for Insurance Practice
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Risk management in air cargo
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Dairy runoff management and profitability
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Statistical Analysis of New Zealand Electricity Prices: A Risk Manager's Perspective
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Offset Banking in New Zealand: towards sustainable development, with insight from international models
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Impact on the North Island freight infrastructure in the event of a disruption of the Ports of Auckland
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Investigating crop and dairy complementarities within a Canterbury farming system. Case studies from the Mid-Canterbury region, New Zealand.
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Exploring contingency planning for adverse weather conditions : how well do event managers plan for inclement weather?
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Dealing with unpredictable risk - The influence of external factors on information systems development and implementations
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Filtering out the Ash: Mitigating Volcanic Ash Ingestion for Generator Sets
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Risks and Options Assessment for Decision making (ROAD): an application to Lake Coleridge and the Rakaia River
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Project uncertainty, project risk and project leadership : a policy capturing study of New Zealand project managers
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Farmers' willingness to participate and pay for, and agricultural extension officers' disposition to communicate weather index-based insurance scheme in Ghana : the case of the Upper East Region
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101 Secrets of Project Risk Management
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Sustainability Reporting for Value Creation and Risk Management
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