Studyspark Study Document

Origins on NIMS Research Paper

Pages:2 (527 words)

Sources:2

Subject:Other

Topic:Incident Command System

Document Type:Research Paper

Document:#48576483


Origins of the NIMS

John D. Rockefeller once quipped that, "I always try to turn every disaster into an opportunity." Through studying the nature of disasters and disaster preparedness, the student of government and organizational management can take the opportunity to learn from the mistakes of the past and assist in establishing more effective institutions for the future. This brief paper will cover the origins of the National Incident Management System (NIMS), the National Response Plan (NRP) and tackle whether such entities assist in mitigating disaster or only contribute bureaucracy and obstacles to the relief of those most in need.

On February 28, 2003, President Bush enacted the Homeland Security Presidential Directive which ordered the Secretary of Homeland Security to create NIMS. The NIMS is intended to provide a consistent, flexible, and adjustable national framework to enable Federal, State and local governments and private sector and nongovernmental organizations to work together effectively and efficiently to prepare for, prevent, respond to, and recover from domestic incidents, regardless of cause, size, or complexity, including acts of catastrophic terrorism. The key items that NIMS establishes is: 1) an Incident Command System, which is a unified command to coordinate the efforts of many jurisdictions and also provide for and assure joint decisions on objectives, strategies, plans, priorities, and public communications; 2) Standardized Communication, which establish interoperable communications systems for both incident and information management which allows all agencies and jurisdictions to have a common operating picture for a more efficient and effective incident response and 3) a Joint Information System, which provides the public with timely and…


Sample Source(s) Used

Sources:

Federal Emergency Management Agency. 2011. Emergency Management. Last Accessed: 23 Jan 2012: http://training.fema.gov/IS/

Pearson, C. And Mitroff, I. 1993. From Crisis Prone to Crisis Prepared. The Executive. 7(1).

Cite this Document

Join thousands of other students and "spark your studies."

Sign Up for FREE
Related Documents

Studyspark Study Document

Ape Speech Research Has Been

Pages: 18 (5500 words) Sources: 15 Subject: Communication - Language Document: #66875718

Another theorist with a different view is Chomsky (1988). Chomsky sees the acquisition of language as a process of input-output, what he calls a Cartesian view of language acquisition and language structure. He states: "We have an organism of which we know nothing. We know, or we can discover, what kind of data is available to it, and the first question we must try to answer is: what kind of

Studyspark Study Document

Advanced Nursing Ethics and Values

Pages: 4 (1391 words) Sources: 1 Subject: Business - Ethics Document: #50110201

Advanced Nursing Ethics and Values (b) Justify the importance of ethical theory -- provide one example: The use of virtue ethics, according to the peer-reviewed Business Ethics Quarterly, is a way of providing resources for "moral thinking"; and for nurses that understand and apply virtue to their work have the background and knowledge as to what to do (that is moral) in any situation (Audi, 2012, p. 273). The virtuous nurse

Studyspark Study Document

Prejudice and Stereotyping Are Not New to

Pages: 4 (1507 words) Sources: 4 Subject: Sociology Document: #59077284

Prejudice and stereotyping are not new to society, but alert students (and others who are educated as to the dangers of prejudice) should beware of falling into stereotyping that unfairly passes judgment on others who are not like us. Thesis: While it is nearly impossible for people to avoid placing certain groups and individuals into strict stereotypical categories, nevertheless honest, thoughtful people recognize and avoid the injustices perpetrated by stereotyping. Prejudice

Studyspark Study Document

U.S. Strategy on Terrorism There

Pages: 10 (2818 words) Sources: 14 Subject: Urban Studies Document: #87923350

(White House, 2003) II. The NATIONAL STRATEGY for SECURE CYBERSPACE The National Strategy for Secure Cyberspace strategic plan states that its strategic objectives are "consistent with the National Strategy for Homeland Security' and that those objectives include: (1) prevention of cyber attacks against America's critical infrastructure; (2) reduction of national vulnerability to cyber attacks and; (3) minimization of damage and recovery time from cyber attacks that do occur. (White House, 2003)

Studyspark Study Document

Emergency Response and Management

Pages: 6 (1656 words) Sources: 5 Subject: Management Document: #46851586

Role of National Strategies in Emergency Operations Plan
Emergency and disaster planning is a process that entails development of a cooperative, coordinated process of dealing with urgent situations using available resources. Generally, this process is exploratory in nature and culminates in development of a plan that offers general procedures for management of unforeseen impacts. According to Alexander (2015), emergency planning basically entails preparing systematically for probable contingencies in the future

Studyspark Study Document

DHS Report Analysis and Review

Pages: 5 (1537 words) Sources: 5 Subject: Aboriginal Studies Document: #66245729

Purpose
This section includes Strategic Strategy Objectives. The core of this section is to develop, implement, and update a method to augment international cargo supply chain security. The strategy included reflects already established work from various agencies involved in the supply chain security and as describes how upcoming actions will be mandated and integrated by SAFE Port Act to achieve this goal. From here the section transitions into major improvements

Join thousands of other students and

"spark your studies".