ISO/TC 223/WG 3 - Command and control, coordination and cooperation
Command and control, coordination and cooperation
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Frequently Asked Questions
ISO/TC 223/WG 3 is a Working Group within the International Organization for Standardization (ISO). It is named "Command and control, coordination and cooperation". This committee has published 1 standards.
ISO/TC 223/WG 3 develops ISO standards. Currently, there are 1 published standards from this working group.
The International Organization for Standardization (ISO) is an independent, non-governmental international organization that develops and publishes international standards. Founded in 1947 and headquartered in Geneva, Switzerland, ISO brings together experts from 170+ member countries to share knowledge and develop voluntary, consensus-based standards that support innovation and provide solutions to global challenges.
A Working Group in ISO is a specialized group responsible for developing standards or technical work within a defined scope. These bodies bring together international experts to create consensus-based standards that support global trade, safety, and interoperability.
ISO/PAS 22399:2007 provides general guidance for an organization — private, governmental, and nongovernmental organizations — to develop its own specific performance criteria for incident preparedness and operational continuity, and design an appropriate management system. It provides a basis for understanding, developing, and implementing continuity of operations and services within an organization and to provide confidence in business, community, customer, first responder, and organizational interactions. It also enables the organization to measure its resilience in a consistent and recognized manner. ISO/PAS 22399:2007 is applicable to all sizes of public or private organizations engaged in providing products, processes, or services that wishes to: understand the overall context within which the organization operates; identify critical objectives; understand barriers, risks, and disruptions that may impede critical objectives; evaluate residual risk and risk tolerance to understand outcomes of controls and mitigation strategies; plan how an organization can continue to achieve its objectives should a disruptive incident occur; develop incident and emergency response, continuity response and recovery response procedures; define roles and responsibilities, and resources to respond to an incident; meet compliance with applicable legal, regulatory, and other requirements; provide mutual and community assistance; interface with first responders and the media; promote a cultural change within the organization that recognizes that risk is inherent in every decision and activity and must be effectively managed. ISO/PAS 22399:2007 presents the general principles and elements for incident preparedness and operational continuity of an organization. The extent of the application will depend on factors such as the policy of the organization, the nature of its activities, products and services, and the location where and the conditions under which it functions. ISO/PAS 22399:2007, however, excludes specific emergency response activities following an incident, such as disaster relief and social infrastructure recovery that are primarily to be performed by the public sector in accordance with relevant legislation. It is important, however, that coordination with these activities be maintained and documented.
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