Designing preparedness – Emergency preparedness in a community context
(2008)- Abstract
- There has been an increased focus in society on preparedness for emergency
response in recent years. Today there is legislation that requires all Swedish
authorities at the local, regional and national levels to prepare for emergency
management and response. Since the task is rather new, most authorities are
just beginning to address it. How the preparedness process should be designed
and integrated into daily work has often not yet been decided.
This licentiate thesis presents research on how Swedish authorities, at a local
and regional level, are working to design their preparedness processes. The
research questions are as follows:
How does the preparedness... (More) - There has been an increased focus in society on preparedness for emergency
response in recent years. Today there is legislation that requires all Swedish
authorities at the local, regional and national levels to prepare for emergency
management and response. Since the task is rather new, most authorities are
just beginning to address it. How the preparedness process should be designed
and integrated into daily work has often not yet been decided.
This licentiate thesis presents research on how Swedish authorities, at a local
and regional level, are working to design their preparedness processes. The
research questions are as follows:
How does the preparedness process function?
What are the challenges and obstacles faced by the organisations
during the preparedness process?
Studies examining the preparedness processes were carried out in five Swedish
authorities at the local and regional level. Five challenges and obstacles were
identified:
- People not directly involved in the preparedness work do not read the plans
created.
- People not directly involved in the preparedness work are not familiar with
the planning.
- There is often no planned process (e.g. exercises and reflections) for
transferring the results of the preparedness work.
- Opportunities to gain a broader view of potential emergencies by the use of
one scenario with its possible variations in the course of events are
commonly overlooked.
- Emergency managers have difficulties getting others in the organisation
interested and committed to preparedness issues, including management.
Every organisation has to develop its own process for working with
preparedness for emergency response to further improve preparedness planning
and avoid the five identified obstacles. To facilitate this effort, every
organisation should consider who needs to be involved (both inside and
outside the organisation) and what knowledge and competences these persons
need to deal with future emergencies. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/1244254
- author
- Eriksson, Kerstin LU
- supervisor
-
- Kurt Petersen LU
- Lars Fredholm LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2008
- type
- Thesis
- publication status
- published
- subject
- pages
- 100 pages
- publisher
- Fire Safety Engineering and Systems Safety, Lund University
- ISBN
- 978-91-633-3030-8
- project
- FRIVA
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- a6c51267-6bc5-4ba3-a08a-a4810f707661 (old id 1244254)
- date added to LUP
- 2016-04-04 12:12:32
- date last changed
- 2018-11-21 21:09:38
@misc{a6c51267-6bc5-4ba3-a08a-a4810f707661, abstract = {{There has been an increased focus in society on preparedness for emergency<br/><br> response in recent years. Today there is legislation that requires all Swedish<br/><br> authorities at the local, regional and national levels to prepare for emergency<br/><br> management and response. Since the task is rather new, most authorities are<br/><br> just beginning to address it. How the preparedness process should be designed<br/><br> and integrated into daily work has often not yet been decided.<br/><br> This licentiate thesis presents research on how Swedish authorities, at a local<br/><br> and regional level, are working to design their preparedness processes. The<br/><br> research questions are as follows:<br/><br> How does the preparedness process function?<br/><br> What are the challenges and obstacles faced by the organisations<br/><br> during the preparedness process?<br/><br> Studies examining the preparedness processes were carried out in five Swedish<br/><br> authorities at the local and regional level. Five challenges and obstacles were<br/><br> identified:<br/><br> - People not directly involved in the preparedness work do not read the plans<br/><br> created.<br/><br> - People not directly involved in the preparedness work are not familiar with<br/><br> the planning.<br/><br> - There is often no planned process (e.g. exercises and reflections) for<br/><br> transferring the results of the preparedness work.<br/><br> - Opportunities to gain a broader view of potential emergencies by the use of<br/><br> one scenario with its possible variations in the course of events are<br/><br> commonly overlooked.<br/><br> - Emergency managers have difficulties getting others in the organisation<br/><br> interested and committed to preparedness issues, including management.<br/><br> Every organisation has to develop its own process for working with<br/><br> preparedness for emergency response to further improve preparedness planning<br/><br> and avoid the five identified obstacles. To facilitate this effort, every<br/><br> organisation should consider who needs to be involved (both inside and<br/><br> outside the organisation) and what knowledge and competences these persons<br/><br> need to deal with future emergencies.}}, author = {{Eriksson, Kerstin}}, isbn = {{978-91-633-3030-8}}, language = {{eng}}, note = {{Licentiate Thesis}}, publisher = {{Fire Safety Engineering and Systems Safety, Lund University}}, title = {{Designing preparedness – Emergency preparedness in a community context}}, url = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/5952800/1244274}}, year = {{2008}}, }