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Key technologies for emergency response
Russell J. Graves
B. Van de Walle, B.C.
Emergency Response involves multiple organizations and teams, geographically distributed operations, and a high need for coordinated control and decision making. As incidents evolve, the number of involved organizations, the geographic distribution of involved entities, and the level and complexity of decision making all tend to grow. Information technology can contribute to managing these and related dimensions of an emergency. The work described in this paper is based on longstanding MITRE Corporation experience working with organizations that have severe and demanding requirements for managing complex, rapidly evolving situations, including military conflict, law enforcement engagements, natural disaster response, and terrorist incident response. Recently, we have conducted a series of detailed observations during emergency response exercises and planned events that resulted in identifying key elements for a successful application of information technologies during an emergency. © Proceedings ISCRAM 2004.
urn:ISBN:9076971080
openurl:?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fidl.iscram.org%2F&genre=proceeding&title=Key%20technologies%20for%20emergency%20response&stitle=ISCRAM%202004&issn=2411-3387&isbn=9076971080&date=2004&spage=133&epage=138&aulast=Russell%20J.%20Graves&pub=Royal%20Flemish%20Academy%20of%20Belgium&place=Brussels&sid=refbase%3AISCRAM
url:http://idl.iscram.org/show.php?record=119
citekey:RussellJ.Graves2004
citation:Russell J. Graves. (2004). Key technologies for emergency response. In B. C. B. Van de Walle (Ed.), Proceedings of ISCRAM 2004 – 1st International Workshop on Information Systems for Crisis Response and Management (pp. 133-138). Brussels: Royal Flemish Academy of Belgium.
2004
ConferencePaper
text
Decision making
Information systems
Information technology
Societies and institutions
Application of information technologies
Co-ordinated control
Consequence management
Distributed operations
Emergency response
Incident Management
Multiple organizations
Terrorist incident
Emergency services
file:http://idl.iscram.org/files/graves/2004/119_Graves2004.pdf
Royal Flemish Academy of Belgium
English
2411-3387
Proceedings of ISCRAM 2004 – 1st International Workshop on Information Systems for Crisis Response and Management
2004
133
138
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