UK Resilience

UK Resilience - Click for home page
|

Main navigation

Handling a Crisis: Lead Government Departments

Introduction

This guidance has been set out to enable Departments to carry out effectively the responsibilities and functions associated with their role as Lead Government Departments. It describes the key processes and disciplines necessary in planning for and responding to crises for which they are either the nominated lead or have key responsibilities to act during the progress of the crisis. It also describes how these processes will be monitored and audited in order to achieve a uniformly high standard of planning and preparation.

The guidance consists of 11 chapters. They are: the Core Guidance document itself (Chapters 1-10), and Guidance for Departmental Internal Auditors and Other Reviewers (Chapter 11.)

See the The Lead Government Department and its role - Guidance and Best Practice (CCS: March 2004) [PDF, 50 pages, 612KB]

Emergencies

Click on the links to see areas of responsibility and departments.

  1. Default position
  2. Terrorism: conventional/siege/hostage
  3. Civil defence
  4. Flooding (coastal or riverine)
  5. Pollution to groundwaters and surface waters, marine and coastal waters (oil, chemical or gas) & marine salvage control
  6. Radiation hazards
  7. Hazardous Materials - chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear incidents arising from non-terrorist causes
  8. Radiation hazards (outside the UK)
  9. Satellite incidents
  10. Emergencies on offshore installations
  11. Disasters overseas
  12. Mass influx of people from abroad
  13. Search and rescue
  14. Severe storms and weather
  15. Transport accidents
  16. Disasters in sports grounds
  17. Dam failures
  18. Earthquakes
  19. Major structural failures in buildings
  20. Serious industrial accidents
  21. Unexploded wartime ordnance
  22. Major software failures
  23. Electronic attack
  24. Disruption of supply chains
  25. Animal disease and welfare
  26. Food contamination
  27. Drinking water contamination
  28. Infectious diseases
  29. Plant diseases

[return to top]