Since the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, and the subsequent establishment of the U.S. Deparment of Homeland Security (DHS), considerable efforts have been made to estimate the risks of terrorism and the cost efectiveness of security policies to reduce these risks. DHS, industry, and the academic risk analysis communities have all invested heavily in the development of tools and approaches that can assist decisionmakers in effectively allocating limited resources across the vast array of potential investments that could mitigate risks from terrorism and other threats to the homeland. Decisionmakers demand models, analyses, and decision support that are useful for this task and based on the state of the art. Since terrorism risk a...