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Viewpoints in Homeland Defense and Security: Thesis Series: Is Prostitution Funding Terrorism? [video]
From the Webpage: "In this Viewpoints interview Richard DiGiacomo discusses the unusual topic of his thesis, 'Is Prostitution Funding Terrorism?' DiGiacomo's thesis argues that the business of prostitution could be a viable criminal funding source for terrorist activities and cites a variety of reasons why - he also proposes several recommendations that if institutionalized could act as significant deterrents to organizations who might be using this method." The duration of this video is 12 minutes, 24 seconds. The complete thesis can be accessed at the following web address: [https://www.hsdl.org/?abstract&did=20517]
Naval Postgraduate School (U.S.). Center for Homeland Defense and Security; Naval Postgraduate School (U.S.)
DiGiacomo, Richard
2010-07-28
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Viewpoints in Homeland Defense and Security: Thinking Like a Terrorist [video]
From the Webpage: "Mike German, former undercover F.B.I. agent now Policy Counsel for the A.C.L.U. [American Civil Liberties Union] and author of 'Thinking Like a Terrorist' gives his unique insight into the factors that motivate terrorists and how this should drive policy considerations for the investigation and prosecution of terror suspects." The duration of this video is 15 minutes and 58 seconds.
Naval Postgraduate School (U.S.). Center for Homeland Defense and Security
German, Michael
2010-05-21
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Viewpoints in Homeland Defense and Security: Building a Team within FEMA [video]
From the Webpage: "Richard Serino discusses how FEMA's new leadership, with their unique perspective, has encouraged the creation of new initiatives that are helping to build a team-like approach, both internally and externally." The duration of the video is 8 minutes and 54 seconds.
Naval Postgraduate School (U.S.). Center for Homeland Defense and Security; Naval Postgraduate School (U.S.)
Serino, Richard A. (Richard Allen), 1954-
2010-04-16
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Opening the Black Box of NIBIN: A Descriptive Process and Outcome Evaluation of the Use of NIBIN and Its Effects on Criminal Investigations, Final Report
"This report outlines the methods and findings from a study of the National Integrated Ballistic Information Network (NIBIN) that was funded by the National Institute of Justice (Grant # 2010-DN-BX-0001). This report begins with a brief description of ballistics imaging and the history and operation of NIBIN. Next, the research methodology and data sources are described. Finally, the findings and recommendations resulting from this study are presented. The study is based on data from four sources. NIBIN usage data (inputs and hits) for all NIBIN sites, detailed hit files from 19 NIBIN sites, survey data from crime labs and firearms sections within crime labs, and information derived from visits to 10 NIBIN sites including details on 65 criminal investigations that involved a NIBIN hit. The data reveal considerable variation in the local implementation of NIBIN and significant time delays in identifying hits. Generally, NIBIN hit reports do not aid investigators, in part because of delays in identifying hits. Although NIBIN has tremendous potential as a tactical and strategic tool, it is rarely used for strategic purposes. Despite these issues, the research team still identified a number of NBIN sites that use NIBIN effectively."
National Institute of Justice (U.S.)
Wells, William; Katz, Charles M.; Maguire, Edward R. . . .
2013-10-23
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Cartel Car Bombings in Mexico
From the foreword: "Improvised explosive devices and car bombs have long been identified as threats to U.S. Army personnel deployed in Iraq and Afghanistan. They have gained considerable attention and notoriety, even infamy, among our troops, who have had to learn the appropriate responses and countermeasures to contend with the fielding of these systems against them. Far less recognized is the fact that a similar threat--embodied in car bombs--has emerged much closer to our homeland within Mexico. Since mid-2010, cartel car bombings have taken place in a country on our southern border and have been targeted against both the forces of opposing cartels and those belonging to Mexican military and law enforcement agencies. With the election of the new presidential Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) administration in July 2012, these car bombings have ceased altogether after rapidly escalating in their levels of employment. Whether this was a response to the expected shift in counter-cartel policies from the National Action Party (PAN) to the PRI administration that began in December 2012, simply a 'strategic pause' of some sort, or an outcome of another casual factor is unknown. What is important is that the use of car bombs in Mexico by the cartels has the potential to threaten U.S. agents, facilities, and interests in that nation and could also conceivably spread to our border cities--though this would appear to be a very unlikely possibility based on the use of car bomb trends and analysis presented in this Paper."
Army War College (U.S.). Strategic Studies Institute
Bunker, Robert J.; Sullivan, John P.
2013-08
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Santa Muerte: Inspired and Ritualistic Killings [Part 1]
"The narcotics wars in Mexico have increased in scope and intensity beginning with President Felipe Caldéron's December 2006 de facto declaration of war against the cartels and gangs. The deployment of Mexican military forces in counterorganized crime and stability and support roles directly responded to the loss of the country's control within many regions--identified as areas of impunity--of the country. Since this conflict began, over 45,000 people have died in the fighting, and the areas of impunity have grown to include wide swaths of territory constituting hundreds of locales now under control of the cartels. The criminal insurgencies waged by the cartels and gangs, centered on a strategy of securing nongovernmental interference with their illicit narcotics and other criminal economic activities, have received much attention and debate. Far less has focused on some of the darker spiritualistic parts of the drug wars. One component entails the rise of the cartel and gang narcocultura (drug culture) variant of the Cult of Santa Muerte (literally translated as 'Holy Death'). This variant of the cult promotes greater levels of criminality than the more mainstream and older forms of Santa Muerte worship. Sometimes it can be so extreme that it condones morally corrupt behaviors--what many people would consider as resulting from an evil value system that rewards personal gain above all else, promoting the intentional pain and suffering of others, and, even, viewing killing as a pleasurable activity. While addressing the rise of such dark spirituality requires a balanced perspective (e.g., avoiding a repeat of the Satanism scare of the 1980s), enough ritualistic behaviors, including killings, have occurred in Mexico to leave open the possibility that a spiritual insurgency component of the narcotics wars now exists. Not all of the narcotics leaders, their foot soldiers, and assassins have remained religious or, alternatively, embraced secularism. But, evidence suggests that the numbers of defections to the cults that worship a perverted Christian god (e.g., La Familia Michoacana and Los Caballeros Templarios) and the various unsanctioned saints (e.g., Jesús Malverde, Juan Soldado, and Santa Muerte) have grown for years."
United States. Federal Bureau of Investigation
Bunker, Robert J.
2013-02?
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Subject Bibliography: Suicide Bombers
This is an FBI (Federal Bureau of Investigation) Library subject bibliography on "Suicide Bombers." Additional information about each source can be found in the abstracts beneath the citations.
FBI Academy
Bunker, Robert J.
2007-05
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Subject Bibliography: Third Generation Gangs and Child Soldiers
This is an FBI (Federal Bureau of Investigation) Library subject bibliography on "Third Generation Gangs and Child Soldiers." Additional information about each source can be found in the abstracts beneath the citations.
FBI Academy
Bunker, Robert J.; Sullivan, John P.
2007-07
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Santa Muerte: Inspired and Ritualistic Killings [Part 2]
"The narcotics wars in Mexico have increased in scope and intensity beginning with President Felipe Caldéron's December 2006 de facto declaration of war against the cartels and gangs. The deployment of Mexican military forces in counterorganized crime and stability and support roles directly responded to the loss of the country's control within many regions--identified as areas of impunity--of the country. Since this conflict began, over 45,000 people have died in the fighting, and the areas of impunity have grown to include wide swaths of territory constituting hundreds of locales now under control of the cartels. The criminal insurgencies waged by the cartels and gangs, centered on a strategy of securing nongovernmental interference with their illicit narcotics and other criminal economic activities, have received much attention and debate. Far less has focused on some of the darker spiritualistic parts of the drug wars. One component entails the rise of the cartel and gang narcocultura (drug culture) variant of the Cult of Santa Muerte (literally translated as 'Holy Death'). This variant of the cult promotes greater levels of criminality than the more mainstream and older forms of Santa Muerte worship. Sometimes it can be so extreme that it condones morally corrupt behaviors--what many people would consider as resulting from an evil value system that rewards personal gain above all else, promoting the intentional pain and suffering of others, and, even, viewing killing as a pleasurable activity. While addressing the rise of such dark spirituality requires a balanced perspective (e.g., avoiding a repeat of the Satanism scare of the 1980s), enough ritualistic behaviors, including killings, have occurred in Mexico to leave open the possibility that a spiritual insurgency component of the narcotics wars now exists. Not all of the narcotics leaders, their foot soldiers, and assassins have remained religious or, alternatively, embraced secularism. But, evidence suggests that the numbers of defections to the cults that worship a perverted Christian god (e.g., La Familia Michoacana and Los Caballeros Templarios) and the various unsanctioned saints (e.g., Jesús Malverde, Juan Soldado, and Santa Muerte) have grown for years."
United States. Federal Bureau of Investigation
Bunker, Robert J.
2013-02?
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Analysis of Merging Fire Suppression and Fire Prevention Career Tracks
"The problem is that the Dallas Fire-Rescue Department (DFR) has two distinct career paths that a new employee may choose to follow upon initial employment and limitations exist that prevent members from moving freely between the two. The paths include firefighter/paramedic and fire prevention officer. The purpose of this research document is to determine through descriptive analysis the costs and benefits that might be derived by DFR as a result of unifying the two career paths. The procedures included literature review and surveys of fire departments across the United States along with internal surveys targeted at employees functioning in each of DFR's career tracks. The results were discovery of DFR employee sentiment of the proposed career path merger along with advantages and disadvantages of having such a model in place. Recommendations included measures aimed at changing DFR's culture to embrace fire inspection activities. Additionally, it was recommended that DFR formulate a larger scale study on how to investigate the feasibility of unifying the suppression and fire inspection career tracks."
National Fire Academy
Salazar, Daniel
2010-10
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Subject Bibliography: Advanced Weapons
This is an FBI (Federal Bureau of Investigation) Library subject bibliography on "Advanced Weapons." Additional information about each source can be found in the abstracts beneath the citations.
FBI Academy
Bunker, Robert J.; Begert, Matt
2007-09
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Radical Islamist English-Language Online Magazines: Research Guide, Strategic Insights, and Policy Response
"This Strategic Studies Institute book provides a comprehensive research guide to radical Islamist English-language online magazines published between April-May 2007 and November 2016, as well as Islamic State eBooks published between November 2012 and November 2015, and a number of assorted radical Islamist news magazines, reports, and pocketbooks. A comparative analysis of Inspire and Dabiq magazine issues are provided along with strategic insights related to al-Qaeda and Islamic State online magazine clusters and their differing strategic approaches as articulated in these magazines. Finally, policy response options, utilizing a targeting schema leveraging the five stages of the magazine life-cycle process: environmental motivators, production, end product, distribution, and outcomes, are discussed."
Army War College (U.S.). Strategic Studies Institute
Bunker, Robert J.; Bunker, Pamela L.
2018-08
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Old and New Insurgency Forms
"While the study of insurgency extends well over 100 years and has its origins in the guerrilla and small wars of the 19th century and beyond, almost no cross modal analysis that is, dedicated insurgency form typology identification has been conducted. Until the end of the Cold War, the study of insurgency focused primarily on separatist and Marxist derived forms with an emphasis on counterinsurgency practice aimed at those forms rather than on identifying what differences and interrelationships existed. The reason for this is that the decades-long Cold War struggle subsumed many diverse national struggles and tensions into a larger paradigm of conflicta [sic] free, democratic, and capitalist West versus a totalitarian, communist, and centrally planned East. With the end of the Cold War and the resulting ideological and economic implosion of the Soviet Union, post-Cold War insurgency typologies began to emerge because a need existed to understand where this component of the new global security environment was heading. Over 2 decades of research and writing have been focused on this endeavor by what is a relatively small number of insurgency practitioners and/or theorists. In addition, the works of some contemporary terrorism scholars are also relevant to this topical area of focus. For this monograph to identify what can be considered new forms of insurgency that are developing, an appreciation for and understanding of earlier insurgency forms must also be articulated."
Army War College (U.S.)
Bunker, Robert J.
2016-03
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Armed Robotic Systems Emergence: Weapons Systems Life Cycles Analysis and New Strategic Realities
"The fielding of armed robotic systems--droids and drones that are teleoperated, semi-autonomous, and even autonomous--has been slowly but surely transitioning from pure science fiction into military reality on the battlefields of the early 21st century. These systems currently have no artificial intelligence (AI) whatsoever and, in most cases, are simply operated by soldiers (and on occasion terrorists and insurgents) utilizing hardline cables and laptop-like controllers, although wireless and satellite systems exist for the more sophisticated national armed drone programs. Near-term future prototypes are likely to have, at best, independent response capabilities similar to a trained animal, due to the incorporation of expert system programming. Projections out even further, however, have raised concerns that these emergent weapons systems, possessing semi-autonomous and autonomous capabilities, could ultimately have the potential to evolve beyond the machine stimulus and response level, eventually incorporating varying degrees of weak AI, and one day possibly even achieving a basic form of self-awareness. [...] In summation, the strategic implications of the robotics revolution upon us cannot be overstated. The robots are not only coming--they are here--and for future U.S. national security requirements, we will need to have a military mastery over them. Hence, our present and future decisions related to armed robotic systems emergence on the battlefield--and the command and control (C2) methodologies directing them--will result in near-term and future force structure end states that will have a fundamental impact on the U.S. conduct of war in the coming decades. These decisions will be a major determinant concerning the ability of the United States to retain dominance as the primary global military power well into the mid-21st century."
Army War College (U.S.). Strategic Studies Institute
Bunker, Robert J.
2017-11
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Viewpoints in Homeland Defense and Security: Thesis Series: Can You Lead Me Now? Leading in the Complex World of Homeland Security [video]
From the Webpage: "In this interview, Nola Joyce discusses her masters thesis on suggested activities and processes to yield more successful leadership within an organization which is required when facing complex issues and problems like those found in homeland security." The Center for Homeland Defense and Security produces the "Viewpoints in Homeland Defense and Security" series to allow homeland security leaders to share opinions on current issues and challenges. The duration of this video is 9 minutes, 1 second. The complete thesis can be accessed at the following web address: [https://www.hsdl.org/?abstract&did=479345]
Naval Postgraduate School (U.S.). Center for Homeland Defense and Security; Naval Postgraduate School (U.S.)
Joyce, Nola
2007-10-09
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Overstaying Their Welcome: National Security Risks Posed by Visa Overstays, Hearing Before the Subcommittee on Border and Maritime Security of the Committee on Homeland Security, House of Representatives, One Hundred Fourteenth Congress, Second Session, June 14, 2016
This is the June 14, 2016 hearing on "National Security Risks Posed by Visa Overstays," held before the Subcommittee on Border and Maritime Security of the Committee on Homeland Security. From the opening statement of Martha McSally: "Border security naturally evokes images of the hot Arizona desert, dusty border roads, agents, and green fencing and camera towers. But a broader view of border security recognizes that there is more than just security along the Southwest Border to consider. Time and time again terrorists have exploited the visa system by legally entering America." Statements, letters, and materials submitted for the record include those of the following: John Wagner, Craig Healy, Kelli Burriesci, and Robert Burns
United States. Government Publishing Office
2017
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Understanding Firearms Assaults Against Law Enforcement Officers in the United States
From the COPS [Office of Community Oriented Policing Services] website abstract, "This publication attempts to answer important questions regarding firearm assaults against law enforcement officers. Initially prepared as a framework for discussion in the 2014 Officer Safety and Wellness (OSW) Group roundtable dedicated to identifying best practices for reducing firearm assaults and ambushes, this publication reviews the group's findings on law enforcement policies, procedures, training, and agency characteristics that can reduce officer deaths and injuries. It is divided into three sections: the meeting's findings and recommendations, a review of 50 years of literature written about situational factors that could lead to assaults, and data identified through a current study."
United States. Department of Justice. Office of Community Oriented Policing Services
Kuhns, Joseph B.; Dolliver, Diana; Bent, Emily . . .
2016
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Nonlethal Weapons: Terms and References
The purpose of this paper is to promote an understanding of and research into a new category of weapons, designated "nonlethal" by the military services. These weapons are also classified as "less-than-lethal" or "less-lethal" by law enforcement agencies. National security experts consider these weapons increasingly important in the post-Cold War era. This type of weapon has been used throughout history, but was given new emphasis during the Vietnam War era. Law enforcement agencies and Army national guard units relying upon traditional forms of politico-military force were ineffective in countering US domestic civil unrest. As similar types of conflict, now many magnitudes greater, seem to dominate international politics since the end of the Cold War, this type of weapon takes on increasing importance. The Department of Defense defines these weapons as follows: Weapons that are explicitly designed and primarily employed so as to incapacitate personnel or materiel, while minimizing fatalities, permanent injury to personnel, and undesired damage to property and the environment. Unlike conventional lethal weapons that destroy their targets principally through blast, penetration and fragmentation, non-lethal weapons employ means other than gross physical destruction to prevent the target from functioning. Non-lethal weapons are intended to have one, or both, of the following characteristics: a. they have relatively reversible effects on personnel or materiel, b. they affect objects differently within their area of influence [229:1-2]. Our intent is to create an initial term and reference listing that will help support joint-force and dual-use initiatives focused on identifying the potential drawbacks of integrating nonlethal weapons into our military services and law enforcement agencies. Because of the limited objective of this paper, it consists solely of two sections: a list of terms that describes nonlethal weapons along with the concepts both surrounding and inhibiting their use and a comprehensive listing of references to facilitate further research. The category of nonlethal weapons that offers the capability for information warfare has not been included in this paper because of its association with that distinct form of conflict.
USAF Institute for National Security Studies
Bunker, Robert J.
1997-07
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Terrorist and Insurgent Unmanned Aerial Vehicles: Use, Potentials, and Military Implications
"Derived from the unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV)
use threat scenarios, three levels of military significance
are foreseen with terrorist and insurgent activities
associated with these devices. Because of the
technologies that will eventually be associated with
UAVs-robotics and expert (and artificial intelligence)
systems networked together-their significance is projected
as increasing over time from the tactical to the
operational and then to the strategic levels of concern. [...] These three threat scenarios result in three corresponding
levels of impact found at the tactical, operational,
and strategic levels of military significance. For
the U.S. Army, the tactical implications of such UAV
use will fall within force protection, counterterrorism,
and defense support of civil authorities' missions. It
will focus on UAV detection, countermeasures, and
tactical response and is an immediate concern. The
operational level of impact is insurgency environment
focused and most likely a near futures issue. It pertains
to the use of groups of human controlled and semi-autonomous
UAVs and represents an expeditionary
concern bridging the tactical into the operational level
of impact. This means that experimentation and red
teaming is warranted related to threat forces' use of
UAVs in insurgency type environments. The strategic
level of concern, on the other hand, may still be a few
decades out, and possibly even beyond the capacity
of terrorist and insurgent forces to field on their own
without state sponsorship. Still, its autonomous and
semi-sentient drone swarm potentials are viewed as
having an immense impact on the future conduct of
war. Considerations need to be made concerning arms
control regimes related to such autonomous, intelligent,
and lethal robotic systems as well as their integration
with human soldiers into future force structures,
if that Army unit composition is elected to be
followed-which presently appears to be the national
trajectory."
Army War College (U.S.). Strategic Studies Institute
Bunker, Robert J.
2015-08
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Colloquium Brief: Robotics and Military Operations - Kingston Conference on International Security
" The 10th annual Kingston Conference on International Security (KCIS) was held in Kingston, Canada, May 11-13, 2015. This significant North American military research activity represents an important bilateral academic strategic outreach interchange between Canadian and American Landpower forces and has been held since 2006. This year's conference theme focused on 'Robotics and Military Operations' and was co-sponsored by the Centre for International and Defence Policy, Queen's University; the Canadian Army Doctrine and Training Centre of the Canadian Forces, Royal Military College of Canada; the Canadian Army Command and Staff College; and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) Defense College; and was conducted in cooperation with the Strategic Studies Institute of the U.S. Army War College. The 162 conference participants and attendees were drawn from government, nongovernment organizations (NGOs), industry, academic, and military entities from across the United States, Canada, and NATO."
Army War College (U.S.). Strategic Studies Institute
Bunker, Robert J.
2015-08-14
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Five-Dimensional (Cyber) Warfighting: Can the Army After Next Be Defeated Through Complex Concepts and Technologies?
In this paper, the author offers a scenario which frontally assaults some of the premises he sees emerging from the Army after Next Project. He forecasts a scenario in which a future enemy concedes that the U.S. Army's superior technology, advanced weaponry, and proven record of success in recent military operations make it virtually invulnerable to conventional forms of symmetric attack. They therefore seek asymmetric ways to obviate those advantages. The author devises a five-dimensional, holistic approach to warfare that uses the three dimensions of land, sea, and aerospace but also incorporates the temporal and cyber dimensions of warfare. This approach to warfare exploits U.S. weaknesses while maximizing the enemy's limited areas of technological capability.
Army War College (U.S.). Strategic Studies Institute
Bunker, Robert J.
1998-03-10
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Suicide Bombings in Operation Iraqi Freedom
This article focuses on suicide bombing. It provides in-depth background information on what suicide bombing is and what the future will hold. "Persistent suicide bombings during Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF) (in pre-, trans-, and post major combat operations) suggest this 'criminal-warfighting' technique will be used with increasing frequency against U.S. Army and allied forces deployed for combat and humanitarian missions in and around Islamic lands.2 Therefore, U.S. Army, Marine, and constabulary personnel must develop appropriate intelligence, countermeasure, and force-protection capabilities to interdict, mitigate, and respond to what has become a threat against U.S. forces in the global war against radical Islamic terrorism and insurgency."
U.S. Army Combined Arms Center
Bunker, Robert J.; Sullivan, John P., 1959-
2005-01
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New Nuclear Order: The Need for Introspection in U.S. Nonproliferation Policy
In this article, Sauer provides his reaction to President George W. Bush's speech at the National Defense University on February 11, 2004. In this speech, Bush proposed a series of steps to upgrade the nuclear nonproliferation regime. Sauer argues, while Bush may have outlined the nuclear nonproliferation agenda for the 25 years, what is missing is an introspective attitude.
Naval Postgraduate School (U.S.). Center for Contemporary Conflict
Sauer, Tom
2004-05
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Viewpoints in Homeland Defense and Security: Thesis Series: Tell Me What I Need to Know: What Mayors and Governors Want from Their Fusion Center [video]
From the Webpage: "Mayors and governors who represent high threat, high-density urban areas need strategic, decision-making advantages and, as such, should be significant users of intelligence products developed by state and local fusion centers. These chief executives desire to understand the operating environment for their jurisdictions where daily risks and threats emerge from the complexities of an integrated world. In this Viewpoints interview, recent CHDS [Center for Homeland Defense and Security] graduate Yi-Ru Chen discusses her thesis which examines the numerous advantages in engaging these top-level officials in this discourse." The duration of this video is 7 minutes, 55 seconds. The complete thesis can be accessed at the following web address: [https://www.hsdl.org/?abstract&did=33136]
Naval Postgraduate School (U.S.). Center for Homeland Defense and Security; Naval Postgraduate School (U.S.)
Chen, Yi-Ru
2009-12-07
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Viewpoints in Homeland Defense and Security: Thesis Series: No Dark Corners: Defending Against Insider Threats to Critical Infrastructure [video]
From the Webpage: "An adversary who makes a frontal attack can be anticipated or repulsed. An adversary who attacks from within, however, cannot be so readily countered. In this Viewpoints interview, winner of the CHDS [Center for Homeland Defense and Security] Outstanding thesis award, Nick Catrantzos, discusses the theory and research that support his unique perspective on how to defend critical infrastructure from an insider attack." The duration of this video is 13 minutes, 51 seconds. The complete thesis can be accessed at the following web address: [https://www.hsdl.org/?abstract&did=33503]
Naval Postgraduate School (U.S.). Center for Homeland Defense and Security; Naval Postgraduate School (U.S.)
Catrantzos, Nick
2009-12-07
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Implementing Community Policing: Lessons from 12 Agencies
"Over time, the community policing reform movement has come to mean many different things to different people. For reformers, community policing is a new paradigm of policing, an entire guiding philosophy, albeit one that is hard to precisely define and measure. Others think of it as a set of community oriented programs and practices such as D.A.R.E. (Drug Abuse Resistance Education), crime-prevention units, and bicycle patrols. The community policing movement has wrestled with this tension between philosophical ambiguity and programmatic specificity for years. So what is community policing? What does it look like? 'What does it mean when a police agency says that it practices community policing?' This volume explores these questions. From the beginning of this project, we assumed that police agency leaders throughout the United States had been busy translating their own visions of community policing into organizational structures and practices. If we were right, then we as researchers could hope to observe, measure, and draw conclusions from tangible and visible phenomena about what 'community policing' meant to the agencies claiming to practice it. With that in mind, we set out to explore the implementation of community policing in 12 local police agencies across the nation."
United States. Department of Justice. Office of Community Oriented Policing Services
Maguire, Edward R.; Wells, William
2009-07
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Subject Bibliography: Mexican and Colombian Drug Cartels
This is an FBI (Federal Bureau of Investigation) Library subject bibliography on "Mexican and Colombian Drug Cartels." Additional information about each source can be found in the abstracts beneath the citations.
FBI Academy
Bunker, Robert J.; Bunker, Pamela L.
2010-05
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Subject Bibliography: Red Teaming
This is an FBI (Federal Bureau of Investigation) Library subject bibliography on "Red Teaming." Additional information about each source can be found in the abstracts beneath the citations.
FBI Academy
Bunker, Robert J.
2008-12
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Subject Bibliography: Beheadings & Ritual Murders
This is an FBI (Federal Bureau of Investigation) Library subject bibliography on "Beheadings & Ritual Murders." Additional information about each source can be found in the abstracts beneath the citations.
FBI Academy
Bunker, Robert J.; Bunker, Pamela L.
2007-08
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Subject Bibliography: Parapsychology & Psychic Criminology
This is an FBI (Federal Bureau of Investigation) Library subject bibliography on "Parapsychology & Psychic Criminology." Additional information about each source can be found in the abstracts beneath the citations.
FBI Academy
Bunker, Pamela L.; Bunker, Robert J.
2007-09