1st Edition
Homeland Security and Criminal Justice Five Years After 9/11
From the Editor’s Desk. 1. Introduction: Homeland Security and Criminal Justice – Five Years after 9/11. 2. Policing Terrorism: The Response of Local Police Agencies to Homeland Security Concerns. 3. Ensuring Efficiency, Interagency Cooperation, and Protection of Civil Liberties: Shifting from a Traditional Model of Policing to an Intelligence-Led Policing (ILP). 4. Interagency Coordination in Reponses to Terrorism: Promising Practices and Barriers Identified in Four Countries 5. The "X-rated X-ray": Reconciling Fairness, Privacy, and Community Safety. 6. Security in the Evolution of the Criminal Justice Curriculum
Biography
Everette B. Penn is Assistant Professor of Criminal Justice and Cross-Cultural Studies at the University of Houston - Clear Lake. He is the author of dozens of publications, including "The ‘Blue’ and the ‘Gray’: Police and Senior Partnerships in the Age of Homeland Security," with Mike Grabowski, and Race and Juvenile Justice. A Fulbright Scholar in Egypt in 2005, Dr. Penn taught American Criminal Justice at Cairo University. He consults with the City of Houston on homeland-security issues. He was also an "individual expert" at the 11th United Nations Congress on Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice in Bangkok, Thailand.






