About
Publication Information
Subscriptions
Permissions
Advertising
Journal Rankings
Best Article Award
Press Releases
Resources
Access Options
Submission Guidelines
Reviewer Guidelines
Sample Articles
Paper Calls
Contact Us
Submit & Review
Browse
Current Issue
All Issues
Featured
Latest
Topics
Videos
Cases
Subscribe
California Management Review
California Management Review is a premier academic management journal published at UC Berkeley
Search
Article Information
How Managers Cope with Terrorism
Ryans, John K., and William L. Shanklin
23
/
2
(
Winter
1980
):
66
-
72
Terrorism has caused many firms to adopt separate strategies for particular countries or to alter their fundamental approach to international business. Acts ranging from murder and kidnapping to property attack have forced the problem of terrorism to the forefront of multinational decision making. Multinational corporation executives offer a variety of strategies for handling terrorism. The article presents a study in which eighty two top international officials from the largest U.S. and overseas multinational corporations were questioned. The consensus was that traditional financial and direct investment considerations have typically failed to include adequately the risks of terrorism. Terrorism is much worse today than a decade ago. The multinational executives ranked it second to inflation as a barrier to doing business worldwide. They overwhelmingly supported the notion that a multinational firm's return on investment goals in high-risk countries must of necessity be considerably greater than they normally would be.