
Enterprise risk management, corporate governance and systemic risk: Some research perspectives
Author(s) -
Salvatore Esposito De Falco,
Antonio Renzi,
Giuseppe Sancetta,
Gianluca Vagnani
Publication year - 2019
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.22495/ncpr_15
Subject(s) - enterprise risk management , corporate governance , risk management , systemic risk , business , macro , task (project management) , it risk , domino effect , it risk management , domino , knowledge management , risk analysis (engineering) , accounting , finance , computer science , financial crisis , economics , management , political science , biochemistry , chemistry , law , catalysis , macroeconomics , programming language
The general goal of Enterprise Risk Management (ERM) processes is to generate economic value through the coverage of firm business risk, on the one hand, and by exploiting the positive side of uncertainty conditions, on the other hand. This study aims to deepen the mechanisms by which the transfer of risk from a focal organization to its task environment may foster the emergence of systemic risk, i.e., a macro risk coming from domino and/or network effects. The paper aims to find new research areas by combining micro and macro issues tied to corporate governance, ERM and systemic risk. Starting from the above assumptions, the paper goal is to open a new research area which combines four academic fields (ERM, corporate governance, corporate finance, and macro-finance).