About the project
In recent decades, there has been a clear trend on a global scale towards increasing natural and anthropogenic risks, many of which have been accompanied by significant human casualties and significant economic damage. In 2020 and 2021, the COVID 19 pandemic showed how important it is to have an adequate risk and crisis management policy. The relevance of the topic is reinforced by the fact that in the coming decades a number of changes are expected on a global, regional and national scale, which could lead to an increase in the frequency and scale of crises and disasters of various kinds. Climate change leading to various natural disasters should be mentioned here; economic and banking crises leading to recession, unemployment and impoverishment; social and political crises in third world countries and new waves of immigrants to Europe and Bulgaria, etc.
In contemporary securitised societies, one should think through the prism of the concept of “risk”. It is not so much security assurance that comes to the fore, but the identification, analysis, assessment, and impact on risk factors, ie. risk management processes. This means that the focus is shifting from threat protection to hazard prevention and early warning of risks.
The main goal of the project is:
By identifying, systematizing and analysing the individual and institutional strategies for prevention and management of risks at macro, meso and micro level, to derive their specifics, to establish and explain their determinism in a specific social context, to assess their potential effectiveness and based on that to formulate proposals for stimulating effective practices.



