Emergency management on the island of Ireland – Recent cross-border developments

Emergency management has developed separately in Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland as a result of the differences in the political, legal, organisational and cultural backgrounds that exist in the two jurisdictions. Good cross-border cooperation has existed at individual organisational le...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Joyce Finian, McCaffrey Joan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2015-12-01
Series:Administration
Subjects:
eu
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/admin-2015-0020
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spelling doaj-9ddd5ce781a2499d97b7da6c5d664ca62021-09-06T19:39:41ZengSciendoAdministration2449-94712015-12-01633416410.1515/admin-2015-0020admin-2015-0020Emergency management on the island of Ireland – Recent cross-border developmentsJoyce Finian0McCaffrey Joan1Chief Fire Officer, Leitrim County CouncilEmergency Planning Coordinator, Local Government, Western Emergency Preparedness Group (Derry City & Strabane, Fermanagh & Omagh, and Mid Ulster District Councils)Emergency management has developed separately in Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland as a result of the differences in the political, legal, organisational and cultural backgrounds that exist in the two jurisdictions. Good cross-border cooperation has existed at individual organisational level between the principal emergency response agencies for many years. Now that regions in Europe are becoming more connected it is becoming increasingly obvious to agencies with responsibility for emergency management on both sides of the border that we need to be better prepared and ready to work effectively together to deal with any major emergency that may arise along the border. Emergencies and natural or manmade disasters do not respect geographical borders, particularly on a landmass as small as the island of Ireland. It is recognised that there is a need for more formalised joint planning and greater collaboration by the statutory agencies, which will result in a more coordinated and effective response to any possible major emergencies or disasters that may occur along the border areas. This paper reviews the current emergency management arrangements in the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland, how the structures, roles and responsibilities of the various agencies involved differ, and how a move to greater collaboration has occurred, as well as examining the drivers for this collaboration, how this has manifested itself so far, and how the potential for pragmatic, flexible and creative solutions will achieve further progress in the coming years.https://doi.org/10.1515/admin-2015-0020emergency managementcross-bordercollaborationcooperationeumajor emergency
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Joyce Finian
McCaffrey Joan
spellingShingle Joyce Finian
McCaffrey Joan
Emergency management on the island of Ireland – Recent cross-border developments
Administration
emergency management
cross-border
collaboration
cooperation
eu
major emergency
author_facet Joyce Finian
McCaffrey Joan
author_sort Joyce Finian
title Emergency management on the island of Ireland – Recent cross-border developments
title_short Emergency management on the island of Ireland – Recent cross-border developments
title_full Emergency management on the island of Ireland – Recent cross-border developments
title_fullStr Emergency management on the island of Ireland – Recent cross-border developments
title_full_unstemmed Emergency management on the island of Ireland – Recent cross-border developments
title_sort emergency management on the island of ireland – recent cross-border developments
publisher Sciendo
series Administration
issn 2449-9471
publishDate 2015-12-01
description Emergency management has developed separately in Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland as a result of the differences in the political, legal, organisational and cultural backgrounds that exist in the two jurisdictions. Good cross-border cooperation has existed at individual organisational level between the principal emergency response agencies for many years. Now that regions in Europe are becoming more connected it is becoming increasingly obvious to agencies with responsibility for emergency management on both sides of the border that we need to be better prepared and ready to work effectively together to deal with any major emergency that may arise along the border. Emergencies and natural or manmade disasters do not respect geographical borders, particularly on a landmass as small as the island of Ireland. It is recognised that there is a need for more formalised joint planning and greater collaboration by the statutory agencies, which will result in a more coordinated and effective response to any possible major emergencies or disasters that may occur along the border areas. This paper reviews the current emergency management arrangements in the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland, how the structures, roles and responsibilities of the various agencies involved differ, and how a move to greater collaboration has occurred, as well as examining the drivers for this collaboration, how this has manifested itself so far, and how the potential for pragmatic, flexible and creative solutions will achieve further progress in the coming years.
topic emergency management
cross-border
collaboration
cooperation
eu
major emergency
url https://doi.org/10.1515/admin-2015-0020
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