Elizabeth Emblem

The Elizabeth Emblem is a national form of recognition conferred by the monarch and awarded to the next of kin of members of the United Kingdom emergency services who are killed on duty. It is named in tribute to Queen Elizabeth II. It is the civilian equivalent of the Elizabeth Cross.

History
On 9 March 2024, the introduction of the Elizabeth Emblem was announced by the government.

Design
The emblem is silver in colour and oval. At the top is a Tudor Crown above the inscription 'For A Life Given In Service', surrounded by a rosemary wreath; a traditional symbol of remembrance. The name of the person commemorated is inscribed on the back.

The emblem includes a pin, allowing it to be worn by a next of kin of the person it is commemorating. A miniature of the emblem will accompany it, which can be worn by the recipient at 'that person's discretion'. The emblem is not intended to be worn directly with other medals.

Recipients of the Elizabeth Emblem will also receive a memorial scroll inscribed with the name of the person commemorated. A close relative who is not the next of kin, for example a parent or partner, may be eligible for an additional memorial scroll, but not the emblem.

Criteria
There are three criteria for a person to be eligible for an Elizabeth Emblem:

Public service

 * A person was employed in a role by, on behalf of, or formally funded by, an eligible body. The definition of an eligible body will be granted by the UK government, a devolved government (Welsh, Scottish and Northern Ireland), local government, a Crown Dependency or a British Overseas Territory;
 * A person worked, either paid or voluntary at the behest of an eligible body, including any person with a formal contract or agreement to work for an eligible body, or ordered to provide a service;
 * A person worked as part of emergency services personnel (either paid or voluntary), dealing directly or indirectly with emergencies. This will include front-line workers, as well as those working in control rooms, all working for emergency services of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, a Crown Dependency or a British Overseas Territory. It also includes those who worked for mountain, cave and water rescue, weather and natural disaster response services and HM Coastguard; and,
 * A person is not eligible to be commemorated by the granting of the Elizabeth Cross.

Circumstance of death

 * A person's death occurred directly as a result of them taking action whilst in the course of their duty;
 * A person was targeted on or off duty, as a result of their role or action they had taken;
 * A person's death occurred during an operational call out, whether this was routine or for an emergency, whereby they died as a result of their response to the call;
 * A person's death occurred due to them acting in assisting in an emergency situation that they were trained for, even if they were not formally on duty at the time;
 * A person's death that occurred as a result of illness or injury attributable to their service; and,
 * At the time of the person's death or during serving their organisation, they were not engaging in a criminal act or in such a way to place themselves or others at additional risk to their life.

Occurrence of death

 * A person's death must have occurred on or after 1 January, 1948; or,
 * A person's death must have taken place in Palestine between 27 September 1945 and 31 December 1947.

Nationality

 * A person who has died may be of any nationality, however, if they were not a British citizen, the granting of the Emblem will be on agreement of the state in which they held citizenship

List of potential recipients
This is a list of potential recipients of the Elizabeth Emblem as collated from other articles on emergency service workers who have died in the line of duty.