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Understanding Mine Action Information Management

118 bytes added, 04:04, 22 September 2013
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==Objects and Processes==__NOEDITSECTION__
In mine action information management, the primary object or focus is contaminated [[land]] and the activities or processes undertaken to reduce or eliminate the contamination in a process called [[land release]]. Other important objects and processes include [[accidentAccident Summary Window | Accidents]]s, [[victimVictim Summary Window | Victims]]s, [[victim assistanceAssistance Summary Window | Assistance]], [[quality QM Summary Window | Quality management]] and [[Education Summary Window | risk education]]. Although it is not the standard situation, these elements may sometimes take the prominent role from the land release process in some mine action programmes.
The process of clearing hazards follows an operational workflow that is reflected in information management as a set of ''business rules''. As each step in the clearance process is completed, attributes of the hazard change so that the hazard eventually is cleared. It is the role of information management to collect information about each step and accurately report the status and attributes of each hazard as it makes its way through the workflow to assist in operational activities such as planning, tasking and clearance operations. Whether a programme is implementing a land release model for hazard clearance or a risk reduction model, the concepts are the same. Hazards are reduced and changed over time by various processes. To implement this effectively in {{IMSMANG}}, information managers must first fully understand the workflow and business rules in use in their programmes.
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