The first R.I.S.K. event took place on December 3, 2009 in Paris, for which the chosen theme was resiliency.
Resiliency is the capacity of a system to return to its initial state following a shock. The major shocks of recent years (September 11, pandemics, subprimes, etc.) have prompted us to rethink the notion of risk along broader lines than the approaches coming out of banking regulations did at the turn of the century. Concepts that are part of an ecological perspective – by nature systemic – like system vulnerability offer two additional dimensions that are today indispensable: systemic reasoning and the temporal dimension. Resiliency thus plays a key role in reinvigorating our approaches, since it allows us to take into account the system’s reaction to a shock over time.
The intersection of concern for sustainable development and rethinking risk is therefore not surprising. What is surprising is the diversity of conceptual tools and practical approaches. R.I.S.K. has sought to begin its history by engaging with this diversity.
To that end, four central themes have been identified:
> It was difficult not to account for the current crisis by examining the world of credit derivatives by way of the theme of Resiliency.
> Another obvious, topical fact: climatic risk.
> The third theme, which the decline in the markets has also made timely with regard to pension funds, is the sustainability of retirement systems.
> Finally, the fourth, more generic theme is the use of stress scenarios to reinvigorate risk measures.
Two hundred participants had the opportunity to exchange thoughts with roundtable speakers and to meet and discuss topics related to risk. While resiliency was not an unfamiliar concept for most participants, the concensus at the end of the day was that the result was a particularly productive way to rethink a lot of current problems. The key learnings are that vulnerability, coping capacities, "no-regrets" strategy, sequential optimization, etc., must become tools in major fields of risk management.
