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rampenplanning

Rampenplanning refers to the systematic process of preparing for, responding to, and recovering from disasters and emergencies. It aims to reduce risk, protect people, property, and critical infrastructure, and ensure continuity of essential services. It involves the development and implementation of plans, procedures, and resource arrangements across organizations and jurisdictions.

Core activities include risk assessment, hazard identification, vulnerability analysis, and capability assessment; creation of emergency operation

The process is often described in phases: mitigation and prevention to reduce risk; preparedness to build capacity

Key actors include government authorities at national, regional, and local levels; emergency services, police, fire, health

Challenges include uncertain hazard occurrence and scale, cross-sector coordination, funding, keeping plans up to date, and

plans,
contingency
and
business
continuity
plans;
procurement
and
stockpiling
of
supplies;
training,
exercises,
and
public
communication
strategies;
evacuation,
shelter,
and
mass
care
planning;
and
information
management
and
interoperable
communications.
and
readiness;
response
to
incidents
with
coordinated
action;
and
recovery
to
restore
normalcy
and
learn
lessons.
Rampenplanning
aligns
with
national
and
regional
policy
frameworks,
international
standards
(for
example,
the
Sendai
Framework
for
Disaster
Risk
Reduction)
and
crisis
management
guidelines
(like
ISO
22320
and
ISO
22301).
agencies;
critical
infrastructure
operators;
the
private
sector
and
industry
associations;
civil
society
organizations;
and
communities
themselves.
Coordination
relies
on
established
incident
management
structures,
information
sharing,
and
interoperable
communications.
conducting
regular
drills.
Effective
rampenplanning
aims
to
minimize
harm,
protect
critical
services,
and
support
rapid
recovery.