The Methodology of Expert Assessment of the Effectiveness of the Use of a Deminer’s Armor and Radiation Protection Complex

Keywords: Complex of Armored and Radiation Protection, Deminer, Humanitarian Demining, Expert Assessment

Abstract

Purpose. Development of a methodology for expert assessment of the effectiveness of using the complex of armor and radiation protection of a deminer engaged in humanitarian demining in conditions of radiation contamination.

Method. Method of agreed expert assessments.

Findings. A novel methodology for expert evaluation of the effectiveness of the use of an integrated armor and radiation protection system for deminers has been developed.

Theoretical Implications. A well-founded possibility of obtaining patterns of rescuers’ activity not only directly during emergency rescue operations, but also during their training and training, in that case at specialized training (educational and training) complexes or with the help of simulation systems that are fully implemented on a computer.

Practical Implications. The possibility of preliminary comparative assessment of the effectiveness of using various complexes of armored and radiation protection during humanitarian demining in conditions of radiation contamination has been substantiated.

Originality/Value of the research: The possibility of preliminary comparative assessment of various complexes of individual protection for a deminer used during humanitarian demining in conditions of radiation contamination, through the use of agreed expert assessments.

Future Research. The need to obtain agreed expert assessments from specialists in the field of humanitarian demining in conditions of radiation contamination.

Paper type: analytical and computational.

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Published
2026-04-30
How to Cite
Strelets, V., Stepanchuk, S., Strelec, V., & Khyzhniak, A. (2026). The Methodology of Expert Assessment of the Effectiveness of the Use of a Deminer’s Armor and Radiation Protection Complex. Social Development and Security, 16(2), 146-161. https://doi.org/10.33445/sds.2026.16.2.13
Section
Civil Security

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