Participants will have an opportunity to develop their technical management and adaptive leadership skills to manage work situations they previously felt trapped in, perform effectively their current functions and get prepared for more senior positions in their respective agencies.
Add course rationale or objectives here (e.g. copy from website)
Add course rationale or objectives here (e.g. copy from website)
Add course rationale or objectives here (e.g. copy from website)
Course Rationale
This Course is meant to strengthen operational level competency of the police through training in collaborative policing by focusing on the need for collaboration and cooperation among the police and other security agencies in the area of combating serious transnational crime, border security management, civilian-military coordination, protection of civilians, sexual exploitation and abuse.
COURSE OVERVIEW
The Kofi Annan International Peacekeeping Training Centre is offering a one week course in Incident Command System (ICS) to limited number of disaster management practitioners, persons training to enter into a disaster management role, police personnel and military participants. This disaster management course reflects KAIPTC’s initiative in developing disaster management courses in support of West African disaster managers and their professional development in the civilian and security sectors. This is in line with building the capacity of disaster managers in support of the ECOWAS Humanitarian Response Mechanism (EHRM). The focus of the course therefore is to provide disaster management professionals with a basic understanding of the Incident Command System; and the ability to plan response actions and strategies for various disaster scenarios.
COURSE AIM
The course is designed to provide disaster management professionals with a basic understanding of the Incident Command System (ICS); and the ability to plan response actions and strategies for various disaster scenarios.
COURSE OBJECTIVES
The course seeks to enable disaster management practitioners to:
a. Differentiate how incidents are commonly categorized by type.
b. Explain the role and responsibilities of the Incident Commander in disaster response operations.
c. Identify common responsibilities that must be adhered to by those responding to a disaster.
d. Identify the factors that influence incident complexity.
e. Identify benefits to planning, and steps
in the Incident Command System planning process.
To equip human rights officers deployed or to be
deployed in field locations including multi-dimensional peace operations with
operational knowledge and skills to fulfil their mandates.
Course Rationale
COURSE OVERVIEW
1. The Kofi Annan International Peacekeeping Training Centre is offering a one week course in Incident Command System (ICS) to limited number of disaster management practitioners, persons training to enter into a disaster management role, police personnel and military participants. This disaster management course reflects KAIPTC’s initiative in developing disaster management courses in support of West African disaster managers and their professional development in the civilian and security sectors. This is in line with building the capacity of disaster managers in support of the ECOWAS Humanitarian Response Mechanism (EHRM). The focus of the course therefore is to provide disaster management professionals with a basic understanding of the Incident Command System; and the ability to plan response actions and strategies for various disaster scenarios.
COURSE AIM
2. The course is designed to provide disaster management professionals with a basic understanding of the Incident Command System (ICS); and the ability to plan response actions and strategies for various disaster scenarios.
COURSE OBJECTIVES
3. The course seeks to enable disaster management practitioners to:
a. Differentiate how incidents are commonly categorized by type.
b. Explain the role and responsibilities of the Incident Commander in disaster response operations.
c. Identify common responsibilities that must be adhered to by those responding to a disaster.
d. Identify the factors that influence incident complexity.
e. Identify benefits to planning, and steps
in the Incident Command System planning process.
Add course rationale or objectives here (e.g. copy from website)
Add course rationale or objectives here (e.g. copy from website)
Add course rationale or objectives here (e.g. copy from website)
COURSE OVERVIEW
1. The Kofi Annan International Peacekeeping Training Centre is offering a one week course in Incident Command System (ICS) to limited number of disaster management practitioners, persons training to enter into a disaster management role, police personnel and military participants. This disaster management course reflects KAIPTC’s initiative in developing disaster management courses in support of West African disaster managers and their professional development in the civilian and security sectors. This is in line with building the capacity of disaster managers in support of the ECOWAS Humanitarian Response Mechanism (EHRM). The focus of the course therefore is to provide disaster management professionals with a basic understanding of the Incident Command System; and the ability to plan response actions and strategies for various disaster scenarios.
COURSE AIM
2. The course is designed to provide disaster management professionals with a basic understanding of the Incident Command System (ICS); and the ability to plan response actions and strategies for various disaster scenarios.
COURSE OBJECTIVES
3. The course seeks to enable disaster management practitioners to:
a. Differentiate how incidents are commonly categorized by type.
b. Explain the role and responsibilities of the Incident Commander in disaster response operations.
c. Identify common responsibilities that must be adhered to by those responding to a disaster.
d. Identify the factors that influence incident complexity.
e. Identify benefits to planning, and steps
in the Incident Command System planning process.
Add course rationale or objectives here (e.g. copy from website)