The Islamic Development Bank (IsDB) operates as a multilateral development financial institution with a mandate to foster socio-economic development across its member countries in accordance with Shariah principles.
Its operational footprint spans multiple jurisdictions, financial systems, development programmes, and stakeholder groups, including governments, financial institutions, donors, beneficiaries, and international partners.
This complex operating environment exposes IsDB to a wide range of threats and crisis scenarios that could disrupt its ability to deliver critical services.
In line with ISO 22301: Business Continuity Management Systems and ISO 22361: Crisis Management, this chapter identifies and assesses the key threat types relevant to IsDB’s business continuity management (BCM) programme and the potential crisis scenarios that may require strategic-level crisis management.
The assessment also reflects regulatory and supervisory expectations within the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA) and applicable central bank BCM policies, which emphasise operational resilience, financial stability, governance, and preparedness for severe but plausible events.
Crisis scenarios, by contrast, are high-impact, low-frequency events that exceed routine incident management and require executive decision-making, coordinated communication, and stakeholder engagement.
For IsDB, threats can escalate into crises due to its systemic role, international exposure, and fiduciary responsibilities.
These threats affect IsDB’s ability to achieve its mandate and maintain confidence among member countries and stakeholders.
BCM relevance: Potential impact on leadership availability, decision-making continuity, and institutional credibility.
As a development bank, IsDB is exposed to financial risks that may disrupt funding, liquidity, and investment operations.
BCM relevance: Impacts critical financial operations, treasury functions, disbursements, and member country support.
Operational threats arise from failures in internal processes, human resources, or service delivery mechanisms.
BCM relevance: Affects the continuity of critical business functions identified through Business Impact Analysis (BIA).
Digital enablement is essential to IsDB’s operations, making technology resilience a core concern within BCM.
BCM relevance: Technology disruptions can have immediate cross-functional and reputational impacts.
IsDB relies on external partners, vendors, and service providers across multiple regions.
BCM relevance: Highlights the importance of supplier continuity, contractual resilience, and oversight.
These threats affect facilities, staff safety, and physical assets.
BCM relevance: Necessitates alternate site strategies, remote working capabilities, and staff safety measures.
Operating across jurisdictions exposes IsDB to evolving legal and regulatory environments.
BCM relevance: Regulatory non-compliance during disruptions can amplify operational and reputational damage.
Based on the threats identified, the following crisis scenarios may require activation of IsDB’s crisis management framework:
Each of these scenarios would require coordinated executive leadership, rapid decision-making, internal and external communication, and alignment with regulatory expectations.
In accordance with ISO 22301, IsDB should ensure that identified threats and crisis scenarios:
KSA and central bank BCM policies further emphasise operational resilience, systemic stability, management accountability, and regular stress testing against severe but plausible scenarios.
The Islamic Development Bank operates in a complex and risk-rich environment where a wide range of threats—strategic, financial, operational, technological, and geopolitical—can disrupt its critical functions.
Understanding these threats and translating them into realistic crisis scenarios is a foundational step in building an effective and compliant BCM and crisis management programme.
By systematically identifying and assessing these threats in accordance with ISO 22301, ISO 22361, and KSA regulatory expectations, IsDB strengthens its ability to anticipate disruptions, respond decisively to crises, and maintain stakeholder confidence.
This structured threat and crisis assessment forms the basis for developing robust continuity strategies, crisis response plans, and ongoing resilience capabilities across the organisation.
Building Resilience: A Guide to Business Continuity Management at IsDB
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