Threats to Homeland Security: Reassessing the All-Hazards Perspective
English
Addresses threats to homeland security from terrorism and emergency management from natural disasters
Threats to Homeland Security, Second Edition examines the foundations of today's security environment, from broader national security perspectives to specific homeland security interests and concerns. It covers what we protect, how we protect it, and what we protect it from. In addition, the book examines threats from both an international perspective (state vs non-state actors as well as kinds of threat capabilitiesfrom cyber-terrorism to weapons of mass destruction) and from a national perspective (sources of domestic terrorism and future technological challenges, due to globalization and an increasingly interconnected world).
This new edition of Threats to Homeland Security updates previous chapters and provides new chapters focusing on new threats to homeland security today, such as the growing nexus between crime and terrorism, domestic and international intelligence collection, critical infrastructure and technology, and homeland security planning and resourcesas well as the need to reassess the all-hazards dimension of homeland security from a resource and management perspective.
- Features new chapters on homeland security intelligence, crime and domestic terrorism, critical infrastructure protection, and resource management
- Provides a broader context for assessing threats to homeland security from the all-hazards perspective, to include terrorism and natural disasters
- Examines potential targets at home and abroad
- Includes a comprehensive overview of U.S. policy, strategy, and technologies for preventing and countering terrorism
- Includes self-assessment areas, key terms, summary questions, and application exercises. On-line content includes PPT lessons for each chapter and a solutions key for academic adopters
Threats to Homeland Security, Second Edition is an excellent introductory text on homeland security for educators, as well as a good source of training for professionals in a number of homeland security-related disciplines.
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