Homeland Security and Counterterrorism
CISAC's homeland security research fellowships and seminars focus on discovering how emergency-response organizations from local to federal levels can best learn from terrorist attacks, other emergencies and exercises, and adapt to meet future security needs.
Publications
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From Pablo to Osama: Trafficking and Terrorist Networks, Government Bureaucracies, and Competitive Adaptation
Michael Kenney
Penn State University Press (2007)
Five- and Ten-Year Homeland Security Goals
Paul Stockton
U.S. House of Representatives, Appropriations Committee, Homeland Security Subcommittee (2007)
Terrorist Organizations' Vulnerabilities and Inefficiencies: A Rational Choice Perspective
Jacob N. Shapiro
Stanford University Press in "Terrorism Financing and State Responses" (2007)
Next Catastrophe, The: Reducing Our Vulnerabilities to Natural, Industrial, and Terrorist Disasters
Charles Perrow
Princeton University Press (2007)
Homeland Security: A New Strategic Paradigm?
Jacob N. Shapiro, Rudolph P. Darken
Oxford University Press in "Strategy in the Contemporary World", 2nd ed., edited by John Baylis, James J. Wirtz, Colin S. Gray, and Eliot Cohen (2006)
Harmony and Disharmony: Exploiting al-Qa'ida's Organizational Vulnerabilities
Joe Felter, Jeff Bramlett, Bill Perkins, Jarrett Brachman, Brian Fishman, James Forest, Lianne Kennedy, Jacob N. Shapiro, Tom Stocking
Combating Terrorism Center, United States Military Academy (2006)
Terrorist Speech and the Future of Free Expression
Laura K. Donohue
Cardozo Law Review vol. 27, 1 (2005)
Disrupting Terrorist Travel: Safeguarding America's Borders Through Information Sharing
Lawrence M. Wein
U.S. House of Representatives (2004)
