Our work is organized around education, psychological readiness, supportive approaches to shelter environments, and the development of practical materials for citizens and partner organizations.

Citizen training is the core of our work. Our goal is to help people act with greater understanding, composure and cooperation in conditions of pressure or restriction.

Key topics:

  • behavior in confined environments
  • crisis psychology
  • stress management
  • rules of coexistence
  • basic principles of group functioning
  • crowd behavior
  • communication under pressure
  • decision-making under stress

Training formats:

  • short-format seminars
  • experiential learning
  • low-intensity, scenario-based educational exercises
  • interactive participation
  • educational materials and guides
These activities are educational in nature and do not replace instructions, protocols or binding guidance issued by the competent public authorities.

In every crisis, human response plays a critical role. We focus on understanding and strengthening psychological readiness so that citizens can remain calmer, cooperate more effectively and reduce the risk of panic or disorganization.

We focus on:

  • composure under pressure
  • understanding fear and uncertainty
  • panic prevention
  • strengthening social cohesion
  • group functioning in difficult conditions
These activities are informational and educational in nature. They do not constitute psychotherapy, mental health treatment or medical services.

We believe preparedness should be accessible and understandable. For this reason, we place particular emphasis on groups that need clear, practical information without unnecessary complexity.

We place special emphasis on:

  • older persons
  • persons with disabilities
  • families
  • caregivers
  • communities that need clear and practical guidance

We develop simple, practical and easy-to-use materials for citizen preparedness in crisis and restricted conditions.

These materials may include:

  • how to reach a shelter
  • what to bring with you
  • how to function in a shelter environment
  • what to expect psychologically
  • basic principles of cooperation and coexistence

Material characteristics:

  • simple and easy to understand
  • informed by scientific evidence
  • informational and non-binding in nature

The Center may provide non-technical, supportive assistance for the basic organizational and user-facing functionality of existing shelter spaces.

Indicatively, this may include:

  • basic signage
  • simple non-technical auxiliary lighting support, where permitted
  • non-technical equipment
  • non-technical functional accessibility accommodations

Any such support is provided in cooperation with the relevant authorities, with prior written agreement or permission where required, and with clarity as to the role and limits of the intervention.

The Center does not prepare technical studies, does not certify premises, and does not guarantee the suitability, functional adequacy or safety of facilities.