Civic Services Lab (ECSL) — civilian-services design-study exchange
ஈழ குடிமை பணிகள் ஆய்வகம்
A non-operational design-study programme proposing UK ↔ diaspora knowledge exchange on civilian public-safety, public-integrity, coast-rescue and digital civic services — PSNI/Patten, ICAC, RNLI and X-Road as comparative anchors. Never operational, never enforcement, never intake.
- · UK MPs
- · APPG for Tamils
- · FCDO
- · College of Policing
- · MHCLG
- · DSIT
- · Home Office (policy)
- · Written questions on UK knowledge-exchange with diaspora civic-services research
- · Letters to the College of Policing on trauma-aware policing curriculum exchange
- · Adjournment debates on Patten Report legacy and post-conflict civilian policing design
- · Questions on RNLI / civilian SAR design exchange in the Indian Ocean
- · Questions on Estonia X-Road and digital-civic-service design principles (with Aadhaar cautionary)
ECSL is a design study, not a service. It proposes how a future Eelam civic state would protect its people — trauma-aware, multi-community, body-cam-default, audit-by-architecture. It claims no operational authority, runs no intake, and impersonates no service. UK Lobbying Act 2014 transparency note applies on every printed brief.
Cited Tier-A evidence is open and unresolved. UK is a co-sponsor of UN HRC accountability resolutions but implementation is uneven. Statements honour memory; evidence remains under-actioned.
Statements are backed by structured packs. Each anniversary produces tabled PQs, FCDO follow-ups, and a tracked answer. Memory becomes evidence; evidence becomes policy; policy becomes repair.
Evidence anchors
Each anchor carries a stable E-id for citation in correspondence, PQs, and parliamentary submissions.
- E.civic-services-lab-design-exchange.001ECSL · Civic Services Lab (TLTE)
- E.civic-services-lab-design-exchange.002ECSL · Charter & Hard Rules
- E.civic-services-lab-design-exchange.003ECSL · 14-unit Architecture
- E.civic-services-lab-design-exchange.004ECSL · 12 Principles
- E.civic-services-lab-design-exchange.005ECSL · Analytic Spine (8 models)
- E.civic-services-lab-design-exchange.006ECSL · Comparative anchors & cautionary refusals
- E.civic-services-lab-design-exchange.007Patten Report (1999) — A New Beginning: Policing in Northern Ireland
- E.civic-services-lab-design-exchange.008ICAC Hong Kong — Three-pronged anti-corruption approach
- E.civic-services-lab-design-exchange.009UK College of Policing — National Decision Model
- E.civic-services-lab-design-exchange.010RNLI — Royal National Lifeboat Institution (civilian SAR)
- E.civic-services-lab-design-exchange.011Estonia X-Road — e-Governance Academy
Policy asks
- UK Government (FCDO)Note opportunities for non-operational design-study knowledge exchange between UK civic-services institutions and Tamil diaspora civilian-services research.
- College of PolicingEngage with diaspora design-study research on trauma-aware policing curricula, drawing on the Patten Report's continuing relevance to post-conflict communities.
- UK Government (DSIT)Reference Estonia's X-Road and the UK's own GOV.UK Service Manual as design anchors, with Aadhaar as cautionary precedent, in any future digital-civic-service capacity exchange.
- UK Government (Home Office, policy)Recognise the distinction between non-operational design studies and operational policing/intelligence work — design exchange does not require security clearance frameworks.
Sample Parliamentary Questions
- written→ FCDO
To ask the Secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs, what assessment has been made of opportunities for UK knowledge exchange with diaspora civilian-services design research from communities affected by the post-2009 Sri Lankan conflict.
- written→ Home Office
To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, what discussions the College of Policing has had on the continuing relevance of the 1999 Patten Report for post-conflict policing design in other contexts.
- written→ DSIT
To ask the Secretary of State for Science, Innovation and Technology, what assessment has been made of comparative design principles between Estonia's X-Road and the GOV.UK Service Manual for digital-civic-service architecture, including cautionary lessons from India's Aadhaar.
- written→ FCDO
To ask the Secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs, what HM Government's position is on civilian search-and-rescue cooperation in the Bay of Bengal and Palk Bay, with reference to the RNLI model.
Pack-specific safety rules
- · Never frames ECSL as an operational service, force, or agency.
- · Never publishes uniforms, vehicle liveries, badges, or photoreal renders.
- · Never proposes intelligence, surveillance, enforcement, or weapons design.
- · Never names individual officers, units, or services in homeland geography.
- · Always pairs reform anchors (PSNI, ICAC, RNLI, X-Road) with explicit cautionary refusals (Aadhaar, Gacaca, TRC).
- · Lobbying Act 2014 transparency note on every printed brief.
TLTE is not a registered consultant lobbyist. This pack is a public-interest civic document. We do not coordinate statements with MPs and we receive no payment from any government.
