An analysis of risk, cost and benefit associated with U.S. domestic anti-terrorism expenditures
According to a variety of U.S. intelligence assessments, the United States now confronts a range of ...
One of the most challenging tasks of homeland security policymakers is to allocate their limited res...
This paper addresses the effect that a tactical reduction of United States military personnel could ...
The cumulative increase in expenditures on U.S. domestic homeland security over the decade since 9/1...
In this article, we present a simple back-of-the-envelope approach for evaluating whether counterter...
Homeland Security Affairs is the peer-reviewed online journal of the Naval Postgraduate School Cente...
Blinded by emotional rhetoric, political posturing, and genuine fear, previous efforts to defend our...
The increase in Federal United States homeland security expenditure since 2001 is approximately $31....
The terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 in the United States have broadened the public sector’s ...
Governments and their regulatory agencies normally exhibit risk-neutral attitudes in their decision-...
Security focused regulations have been largely exempt from the benefit-cost type of analysis require...
We evaluate, for the U.S. case, the costs and benefits of three security measures designed to reduce...
THE RECENT foiled plot in the United Kingdom highlighted the reality of homeland security threats. D...
This 2007 article (based around an invited conference talk at Wayne State in early 2007) addresses r...
In the years following 9/11, the United States spent billions and billons on powerful surveillance a...
According to a variety of U.S. intelligence assessments, the United States now confronts a range of ...
One of the most challenging tasks of homeland security policymakers is to allocate their limited res...
This paper addresses the effect that a tactical reduction of United States military personnel could ...
The cumulative increase in expenditures on U.S. domestic homeland security over the decade since 9/1...
In this article, we present a simple back-of-the-envelope approach for evaluating whether counterter...
Homeland Security Affairs is the peer-reviewed online journal of the Naval Postgraduate School Cente...
Blinded by emotional rhetoric, political posturing, and genuine fear, previous efforts to defend our...
The increase in Federal United States homeland security expenditure since 2001 is approximately $31....
The terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 in the United States have broadened the public sector’s ...
Governments and their regulatory agencies normally exhibit risk-neutral attitudes in their decision-...
Security focused regulations have been largely exempt from the benefit-cost type of analysis require...
We evaluate, for the U.S. case, the costs and benefits of three security measures designed to reduce...
THE RECENT foiled plot in the United Kingdom highlighted the reality of homeland security threats. D...
This 2007 article (based around an invited conference talk at Wayne State in early 2007) addresses r...
In the years following 9/11, the United States spent billions and billons on powerful surveillance a...
According to a variety of U.S. intelligence assessments, the United States now confronts a range of ...
One of the most challenging tasks of homeland security policymakers is to allocate their limited res...
This paper addresses the effect that a tactical reduction of United States military personnel could ...