ISPI's practitioner-led research addresses six specific public safety and security policy gaps documented in this location — gaps that continental frameworks were not designed to close.
Emergency Management
Cyclone Ditwah — Framework Failure in Real Time
Sri Lanka's response to Cyclone Ditwah in November 2025 demonstrated in real time the three foundational framework failures ISPI documents across island emergency management: mutual aid that cannot reach the acute response phase, supply chain disruption with no geographic alternative, and communication infrastructure degraded by the same event it was supposed to manage. Sri Lanka's emergency management framework — like every island jurisdiction's — was built for continental assumptions that do not hold on islands.
Supply Chain
The Iran War Supply Chain Compound Crisis
The 2026 Iran war compounded Sri Lanka's Cyclone Ditwah recovery by disrupting the air corridor critical for Sri Lankan workers in the Gulf, raising energy prices, and disrupting the tourism sector that Sri Lanka depends on for foreign exchange. An island nation recovering from a major disaster while simultaneously managing external supply chain disruption has no geographic fallback. ISPI's supply chain singularity framework addresses this compound vulnerability directly.
Governance
Post-Crisis Democratic Resilience
Sri Lanka's 2022 governance collapse — when the government fell under sustained public pressure over an economic crisis — and the subsequent IMF-led recovery demonstrated the governance vulnerability of island states with high import dependency and limited institutional buffer. ISPI's democratic resilience research identifies the specific mechanisms through which economic and governance crises compound in island environments.
Law Enforcement
Terrorism Prevention Act and Community Trust
Sri Lanka's documented overuse of the Prevention of Terrorism Act — increasing from 38 cases in 2024 to 49 in the first five months of 2025 — reflects a law enforcement governance challenge that ISPI's practitioner-led research directly addresses: the erosion of community trust in law enforcement that follows militarized enforcement approaches in small island communities where social density makes enforcement legitimacy a critical community safety asset.
Emergency Management
Post-Disaster Identity Documentation
Cyclone Ditwah's destruction of identity documents — birth certificates, marriage records — left affected families unable to access relief or prove property ownership, demonstrating a documentation and civil registration resilience gap that ISPI's island emergency management framework identifies as a critical continuity-of-operations requirement for island governments.
Supply Chain
Healthcare Supply Chain Resilience
Sri Lanka's neighbor island and rural communities face pharmaceutical and medical equipment supply constraints during any major emergency event — the same 30-day supply reserve standard ISPI recommends for all island healthcare systems operating as community emergency anchors. Cyclone Ditwah demonstrated that existing healthcare supply buffer was inadequate for a sustained island emergency.