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Urban Crisis Workshop

by msecadm4921

A first Urban Crisis Workshop was hosted at Coventry University‚Äôs London Campus….

Former Brigadier General John Galatas, the man responsible for planning against the threat of chemical, biological, radiological, nuclear and explosive (CBRNE) attacks at the 2004 Summer Olympic Games in Greece, scrutinised the security risks associated with the 2012 Olympic Games.

The speakers – which include House of Lords peers, academics and professionals from key international security and disaster management organisations – also talked about lessons learned from major urban emergencies such as the London bombings, 9/11, worldwide flooding crises and the tsunami-nuclear catastrophe in Japan, and propose ways to improve response capabilities.

Among the speakers was Professor Sir John Beddington, chief scientific advisor to the UK government; Lord Toby Harris, former chair of the Metropolitan Police Authority and current chairman of City Security and Resilience Networks (CSARN); and the director of the Texas Engineering Extension Service (TEEX), Bob McKee, who was involved in the search and rescue operations in New York in the immediate aftermath of 9/11.

Professor Sara de Freitas of Coventry University’s Serious Games Institute (SGI) chaired the workshop and led a debate on how gaming and simulation technologies can help create better, more realistic training exercises for modern search and rescue scenarios.

The aim of the Urban Crisis Workshop: to set in motion plans to establish a London-based International Risk, Resilience and Response Centre (IRRRC) to spearhead collaborations between specialists in emergency response and management, training, simulation and gaming.

The event was sponsored by security thinktank CSARN, Arup and the Prime Minister’s Initiative for International Education – a government fund to attract more overseas students to Britain through investment in projects which boost the global profile of UK education.

The Serious Games Institute and the Centre for Disaster Management (CDM) – two of Coventry University’s most prominent applied research centres – have been instrumental in devising the Urban Crisis Workshop in partnership with TEEX.

John Galatas, former Brigadier General and CBRNE planner for the 2004 Athens Olympics, said: “Despite the vigilance and preparations of the UK’s national security agencies, a terrorist attack – conventional or CRBNE-related – during the world’s biggest sporting event, the London 2012 Olympic Games, remains a very real threat.

“The first Urban Crisis Workshop will address the important parameters in urban defence, and will identify the gaps and possible weak points which need to be updated and managed. There is still some time until July 2012, and this time must be used as wisely as possible.”

Professor Sara de Freitas, director of the SGI and chair of the Urban Crisis Workshop, said: “This workshop aims to bring together communities in risk, resilience and response to save lives. It represents an exciting opportunity not only for the international emergency response community and relevant policy-makers in government, but also for game development companies.

“The industry for serious games is relatively young, but there’s a rapidly growing appreciation for the relevance of its technology to education and, in this instance, emergency planning and training. Its potential applications are endless.”

Wayne Harrop, director of the Centre for Disaster Management at Coventry University, said: “In the wake of urban catastrophes such as 9/11, the London bombings, the devastating tsunami in Japan and last week’s earthquake in Turkey, it is more important than ever to consider how the lessons identified through these disasters can be better learned, retained and implemented in the future. This requires better collaboration efforts and the sharing of best practices on a global scale.

“The Urban Crisis Workshop will be the first time our plans for an International Risk, Resilience and Response Centre will be made public, and we’re thrilled to be able to share them with the disaster management community as a means of encouraging continuous development and improvement in global response capabilities.”

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