1st Edition

National Security Issues in Science, Law, and Technology

Edited By Thomas A. Johnson Copyright 2007
    680 Pages 15 B/W Illustrations
    by CRC Press

    The tragedy of 9/11 placed homeland security and the prevention of further attacks into the central focus of our national consciousness. With so many avenues of terror open to our enemies in terms of mode, medium, and location, effective management and mitigation of threat must be grounded in objective risk assessment. The structure of national security decisions should be premised on decision theory and science with minimal political posturing or emotional reactivisim.

    National Security Issues in Science, Law, and Technology demonstrates a mature look at a frightening subject and presents sound, unbiased tools with which to approach any situation that may threaten human lives. By applying the best of scientific decision-making practices this book introduces the concept of risk management and its application in the structure of national security decisions. It examines the acquisition and utilization of all-source intelligence, including the ability to analyze data and forecast patterns, to enable policymakers to make better informed decisions. The text addresses reaction and prevention strategies applicable to chemical, biological, and nuclear weapons; agricultural terrorism; cyberterrorism; and other potential threats to our critical infrastructure. It discusses legal issues that inevitably arise when integrating new legislation with the threads of our Constitution and illustrates the dispassionate analysis of our intelligence, law enforcement, and military operations and actions. Finally, the book considers the redirection of our national research and laboratory system to investigate the very problems terrorists can induce through the use of weapons we have as yet to confront.

    Taking the guesswork out of hard choices, National Security Issues in Science, Law, and Technology provides anyone burdened with the mantle of responsibility for the protection of the American people with the tools to make sound, well-informed decisions.

    Section I – Terrorism: Threats, Vulnerabilities and Weapons
    An Introduction to the Intelligence Process for Addressing National Security Threats and Vulnerabilities, Dr. T.A. Johnson
    Medical Response to Chemical and Biological Terrorism, Dr. M. Allswede
    Agroterrorism, S. Kenyon
    Illicit Trafficking in Nuclear and Radiological Materials, D. York
    Nuclear Capabilities of North Korea: Issues in Intelligence, Collection, Analysis and National Security Policy, Dr. T.A. Johnson
    Section II – Cyber Terrorism and Cyber Security
    A Framework for Deception, Dr. F. Cohen
    Critical Infrastructure Protection, Dr. F. Cohen
    Information Warfare, Netwar and Cyber Intelligence, Dr. F. Cohen                 
    Section III – National Security Strategy:  Implications for
    Science, Law and Technology
    Geographic Information Systems as a Strategic Tool for Better Planning, Response, and Recovery, L.A. Savitz, R. Proffitt Lavin, and E. Root
    An Introduction to the Concept and Management of Risk, J. Matschulat
    The Structure of National Security Decisions, J. Matschulat
    National Security Executive Orders and Legal Issues, R. Shannon
    Courts Martial, Military Tribunals and the Federal Courts, R. Shannon
    National Nuclear Security Administration Laboratories: Emerging Role in Homeland Security, Dr. R.A. Neiser
                                   
    An All-Hazards National Response Plan, Dr. T.A. Johnson
    Appendices
    Appendix A -         National Security Strategy Executive Summary
    Appendix B -         Homeland Security Presidential Directives 1-14

    Biography

    Thomas A. Johnson

    Each of these chapters are written by an expert in the field, and together they provide for a theoretical framework that our Government needs to understand if it is to be successful.
    – Books-On-Line

    To properly weave together the topics of science, technology, and law under the rubric of national security is a tall order. In this text, editor Thomas A. Johnson has done so perfectly . . . highly readable text.
    – Col. Kuljeet Singh, CPP, The Wright Group, Inc., in Security Management, March 2008