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The mission of the HFN Research Group is to improve the effectiveness and the efficiency of U.S. and International Disaster Relief Operations, especially where the U.S. is working in collaboration with NGO, IO, and Foreign Governments. A large part of our research is dedicated to providing a suite of communications equipment that is portable and includes a power generation system that utilizes renewable energy sources.

Brian Steckler Bio and CV

Brian D. Steckler

Director, Hastily Formed Networks Research Group
Naval Postgraduate School
Monterey, CA

HFN Learning Aid - "Disaster Challenge" Online Interactive Prototype Utility

The Naval Postgraduate School (Monterey CA USA) HFN Research Group and Office of Continuous Learning have created a prototype flash/web based learning tool that in its final form will be available free to anyone. The tool, called "Disaster Challenge", features animated early responders deciding which equipment to bring to a disaster zone to enable rapidly deployed communications.

Canned info movie about the project, approx 7 minutes long - http://faculty.nps.edu/dl/HFN/DisasterChallengeConcept2/Disaster_Challen...

HFN in Sweden

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HFN in Sweden

This project is financed by the Swedish Emergency Management Agency (SEMA) 2008-2011 to study the communication potential within Hastily formed networks (HFN) in a disaster scenario. The vehicle for the study will be a technical platform in the form of a simulation environment in which there will be approximations of realistic mobility models, heterogeneous actor groups and traffic generation as a basis for evaluation of novel energy-efficient algorithms for reliable and secure communication.

Robert Leitch: Bloody Hands and Bleeding Hearts – Civil Military Cooperation in Humanitarian Operations


Robert Leitch and Friend at Rumbek Airfield

"[h]umanitarian agencies don’t mind coordinating
with the military but they don’t like being coordinated
by the military"

-Hugo Slim

It is almost a year ago today that I rather foolishly volunteered, without a second thought, to join a Project HOPE mission as the leader of a contingent of medical volunteers aboard the USNS COMFORT. The plan was for the hospital ship to visit twelve countries in Latin America and the Caribbean. Project HOPE would provide a group of about twenty five volunteers at any one time.

During this Odyssey, I wrote a couple or articles. In one I described the mission as an exercise in what had become known as ‘Medical Diplomacy’ and promised I would examine the issue in depth at a later date. The key issues, it seemed to me, centered around the relationship between NGOs, in this case Project HOPE, and the US military and the US Navy in particular. Is this a good model for future humanitarian operations? What does the US Navy get from it? What do NGOs like Project HOPE get from it? Is this a flag waving exercise or does it provide long-term good for the recipient countries and their people? I have procrastinated for almost four months since the end of the COMFORT mission; herewith my observations.

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SENTRY 5000 MOBILE SUPPORT UTILITES, DEAN PELLEGATA

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I’d like to introduce to you the Sentry 5000, the All-in-One Mobile Utility System designed to provide on-demand utility service for emergency response, disaster recovery and remote operations support. Completely mobile and operational within minutes , the Sentry 5000 can provide hours of electrical power, heating and cooling, water purification, compressed air, perimeter lighting and satellite communications when and where you need it.