International expertise and local know-how in the trading zone
Journal article, 2012
The management of risk and crises is increasingly seen as a matter of mobilizing formal, rational and calculative systems. Still, the capacity to understand and evaluate the social
context within which risk and crises are embedded is of great importance. Examining the case of
the outbreak of Marburg haemorrhagic fever in Angola in 2004—2005, the concept of trading zone
is proposed as a mechanism bridging international expertise (in this case, that of the medical
experts of the World Health Organization) and the local actors’ (Angolan health care workers,
elders, etc.) understandings of the needs and demands of the community. Recognizing that risks
are by definition impossible to fully anticipate, management practice, as part of organizing
should emphasize not only rational systems for monitoring and controlling risk and crises, but also
the value of including trading zones and a metacode as a pidgin that facilitates collaboration
between heterogeneous groups in such zones, each understanding their reality based on local,
cultural codes.
Professional organizations
Crisis management
Expertise
Health care
Collaboration
Trading zone