Critical Infrastructure
Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness, Second Edition
By Robert S. Radvanovsky, Allan McDougall
Published December 1st 2009 by CRC Press – 318 pages
Published December 1st 2009 by CRC Press – 318 pages
To keep emergency management, disaster response, and homeland security personnel fully current, Radvanovsky and McDougall have updated their essential reference.Keeping pace with the changes in laws and policies made by the Department of Homeland Security, Critical Infrastructure: Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness, Second Edition reflects the development of the Incident Command System (ICS) and the total revision of the National Response Framework (NRF), implemented in 2008. The book expands sections on the National Institute of Standards and Technology, the Homeland Security Presidential Directives, and Supervisory Control and Data Acquisitions Systems (SCADA) security initiatives.
Includes Downloadable Web References
In addition to being a comprehensive source of highly useful reference material, this timely work also introduces the paradigm shift in thinking that is subtly moving us away from the Force Protection Doctrine toward an All-Hazards approach to CIP. To this end, it re-introduces the term called Critical Infrastructure Assurance (CIA). Keeping pace with this development, the authors demonstrate how emergency management and CIA go hand in hand.
This changing world of ours in which emergency preparedness is finding a permanent niche requires us to integrate and incorporate emergency management and homeland security concepts with infrastructure assurance options. Ultimately, to keep our society both prepare and psychologically healthy we must be able to assure that infrastructure services will continue operating no matter what disaster may befall us.
Broken into 11 categories, the book begins with the first priority that must be considered in protecting critical infrastructure and follows with the next 10 in descending order of importance:
On first glance, there would appear to be significant overlap and this is true, as overlap is essential to the building of a failsafe system. However, there are also significant differences that need to be studied and understood, so that emergency planners and responders can act with confidence and help the populace respond in a measured manner. Ultimate restoration of order and our society’ capacity to prevail rather than just survive is fully dependent on proper preparedness of the highest order.
Name: Critical Infrastructure: Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness, Second Edition (Hardback) – CRC Press
Description: By Robert S. Radvanovsky, Allan McDougall. To keep emergency management, disaster response, and homeland security personnel fully current, Radvanovsky and McDougall have updated their essential reference.Keeping pace with the changes in laws and policies made by the Department of Homeland...
Categories: Critical Security, Security Services, Forensic Science - Law