Chelmsford Borough Council: A designated International Safe Community

This article provides some background to the Safe Communities concept and sets out the criteria to be satisfied as an International Safe Community (ISC). It concludes with reflections about Chelmsford Borough Council’s responsibilities as a Demonstration Site within the UK, and how Council has cont...

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Main Author: Averil Price
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: UTS ePRESS 2010-12-01
Series:Commonwealth Journal of Local Governance
Online Access:https://learning-analytics.info/journals/index.php/cjlg/article/view/1917
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spelling doaj-e09fce04fc064d35a13d39b2df510b8e2020-11-25T01:57:20ZengUTS ePRESSCommonwealth Journal of Local Governance1836-03942010-12-01710.5130/cjlg.v0i7.19171201Chelmsford Borough Council: A designated International Safe CommunityAveril Price0Chelmsford Borough Council This article provides some background to the Safe Communities concept and sets out the criteria to be satisfied as an International Safe Community (ISC). It concludes with reflections about Chelmsford Borough Council’s responsibilities as a Demonstration Site within the UK, and how Council has contributed within an International Network. There are currently over 200 communities across the world that have been designated as International Safe Communities by the World Health Organisation (WHO), and in June 2010, the Chelmsford Borough Council became the first local authority area to achieve this recognition in the UK. International Safe Communities is a World Health Organisation initiative that recognises safety as a ‘universal concern and a responsibility for all’. 1 It is an approach to community safety that encourages greater cooperation and collaboration between a range of non-government organisations, the business sector and local and government agencies. In order to be designated as an ISC, communities are required to meet six criteria developed by the WHO Collaborating Centre on Community Safety. The ISC accreditation process provides support for communities and indicates a level of achievement by an organisation within the field of community safety. https://learning-analytics.info/journals/index.php/cjlg/article/view/1917
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Averil Price
spellingShingle Averil Price
Chelmsford Borough Council: A designated International Safe Community
Commonwealth Journal of Local Governance
author_facet Averil Price
author_sort Averil Price
title Chelmsford Borough Council: A designated International Safe Community
title_short Chelmsford Borough Council: A designated International Safe Community
title_full Chelmsford Borough Council: A designated International Safe Community
title_fullStr Chelmsford Borough Council: A designated International Safe Community
title_full_unstemmed Chelmsford Borough Council: A designated International Safe Community
title_sort chelmsford borough council: a designated international safe community
publisher UTS ePRESS
series Commonwealth Journal of Local Governance
issn 1836-0394
publishDate 2010-12-01
description This article provides some background to the Safe Communities concept and sets out the criteria to be satisfied as an International Safe Community (ISC). It concludes with reflections about Chelmsford Borough Council’s responsibilities as a Demonstration Site within the UK, and how Council has contributed within an International Network. There are currently over 200 communities across the world that have been designated as International Safe Communities by the World Health Organisation (WHO), and in June 2010, the Chelmsford Borough Council became the first local authority area to achieve this recognition in the UK. International Safe Communities is a World Health Organisation initiative that recognises safety as a ‘universal concern and a responsibility for all’. 1 It is an approach to community safety that encourages greater cooperation and collaboration between a range of non-government organisations, the business sector and local and government agencies. In order to be designated as an ISC, communities are required to meet six criteria developed by the WHO Collaborating Centre on Community Safety. The ISC accreditation process provides support for communities and indicates a level of achievement by an organisation within the field of community safety.
url https://learning-analytics.info/journals/index.php/cjlg/article/view/1917
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