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The recent European Council Directive 114/08 requested the EU
Member States to perform an assessment aimed at the identification
and designation of the so-called European Critical Infrastructures
(ECI). Every analysis of the results of the "first round" of
identifications and designations has only taken into account the
numbers of ECIs effectively designated, consequently leaving aside
all of the other elements related to this important path towards a
harmonized vision of the "European Security." This work, with its
unprecedented approach, focuses on the elements that have maximized
or frustrated the ambitious European objectives and on the issues
that might have prevented the directive reaching its full
potential. Furthermore, the study offers an in-depth perspective on
the lessons learned - including those that can be learned from the
US pre-post 9/11 CIP policies - as well as an assessment of the
state of play of the Member States after the implementation of the
directive, together with predictions for future challenges.
External Dimension of the European Union's Critical Infrastructure
Protection Programme: From Neighboring Frameworks to Transatlantic
Cooperation provides the basis, methodological framework, and first
comprehensive analysis of the current state of the external
dimension European Programme for Critical Infrastructure
Protection. The challenges at the EU level are multidimension
insofar as identifying, designating and protecting critical
infrastructures with the ultimate goal of harmonizing different
national policies of the Member States and creating the identity of
the European Union in this arena. Modern society has become so
reliant on various sectors of critical infrastructure-energy,
telecommunications, transport, finance, ICT, and public
services-that any disruption may lead to serious failures that
impact individuals, society, and the economy. The importance of
critical infrastructures grows with the industrial development of
global and national communities; their interdependence and
resiliency is increasingly important given security threats
including terrorism, natural disaster, climate change and pandemic
outbreak In the area of Critical Infrastructure Protection and
Resilience, the European Union is constantly committed to setting
the objectives for the Member States. At the same time, the
European Commission promotes the importance of a common approach to
Critical Infrastructure Protection (CIP), and ensure cooperation
beyond the borders of the Union, while also cooperating with
neighboring countries, including those soon willing to join the
European Union. This book has been structured and written to
contribute to current critical infrastructures, resilience policy
development and discussions about regional and international
cooperation. It serves as a reference for those countries willing
to initiate cooperation and that therefore demand deeper knowledge
on the security cultures and frameworks of their potential
partners. Features: Provides an unprecedented analysis of the
national frameworks of 14 neighboring countries of the EU, plus the
United States and Canada Overcomes the language barriers to provide
an overall picture of the state of play of the countries considered
Outlines the shaping of national critical infrastructure protection
frameworks to understanding the importance of service stability and
continuity Presents guidelines to building a comprehensive and
flexible normative framework Addresses the strategic and
operational importance of international co-operation on critical
infrastructure including efforts in CIP education and training
Provides insight to institutions and decision-makers on existing
policies and ways to improve the European security agenda The book
explains and advocates for establishing stronger, more resilient
systems to preserve functionalities at the local, national, and
international levels. Security, industry, and policy experts-both
practitioners and policy decision-makers-looking for answers will
find the solutions they seek within this book.
External Dimension of the European Union's Critical Infrastructure
Protection Programme: From Neighboring Frameworks to Transatlantic
Cooperation provides the basis, methodological framework, and first
comprehensive analysis of the current state of the external
dimension European Programme for Critical Infrastructure
Protection. The challenges at the EU level are multidimension
insofar as identifying, designating and protecting critical
infrastructures with the ultimate goal of harmonizing different
national policies of the Member States and creating the identity of
the European Union in this arena. Modern society has become so
reliant on various sectors of critical infrastructure-energy,
telecommunications, transport, finance, ICT, and public
services-that any disruption may lead to serious failures that
impact individuals, society, and the economy. The importance of
critical infrastructures grows with the industrial development of
global and national communities; their interdependence and
resiliency is increasingly important given security threats
including terrorism, natural disaster, climate change and pandemic
outbreak In the area of Critical Infrastructure Protection and
Resilience, the European Union is constantly committed to setting
the objectives for the Member States. At the same time, the
European Commission promotes the importance of a common approach to
Critical Infrastructure Protection (CIP), and ensure cooperation
beyond the borders of the Union, while also cooperating with
neighboring countries, including those soon willing to join the
European Union. This book has been structured and written to
contribute to current critical infrastructures, resilience policy
development and discussions about regional and international
cooperation. It serves as a reference for those countries willing
to initiate cooperation and that therefore demand deeper knowledge
on the security cultures and frameworks of their potential
partners. Features: Provides an unprecedented analysis of the
national frameworks of 14 neighboring countries of the EU, plus the
United States and Canada Overcomes the language barriers to provide
an overall picture of the state of play of the countries considered
Outlines the shaping of national critical infrastructure protection
frameworks to understanding the importance of service stability and
continuity Presents guidelines to building a comprehensive and
flexible normative framework Addresses the strategic and
operational importance of international co-operation on critical
infrastructure including efforts in CIP education and training
Provides insight to institutions and decision-makers on existing
policies and ways to improve the European security agenda The book
explains and advocates for establishing stronger, more resilient
systems to preserve functionalities at the local, national, and
international levels. Security, industry, and policy experts-both
practitioners and policy decision-makers-looking for answers will
find the solutions they seek within this book.
The recent European Council Directive 114/08 requested the EU
Member States to perform an assessment aimed at the identification
and designation of the so-called European Critical Infrastructures
(ECI). Every analysis of the results of the "first round" of
identifications and designations has only taken into account the
numbers of ECIs effectively designated, consequently leaving aside
all of the other elements related to this important path towards a
harmonized vision of the "European Security". This work, with its
unprecedented approach, focuses on the elements that have maximized
or frustrated the ambitious European objectives and on the issues
that might have prevented the directive reaching its full
potential. Furthermore, the study offers an in-depth perspective on
the lessons learned - including those that can be learned from the
US pre-post 9/11 CIP policies - as well as an assessment of the
state of play of the Member States after the implementation of the
directive, together with predictions for future challenges.
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