Document Type
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BL
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Record Number
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1011629
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Doc. No
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b765999
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Main Entry
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Jackson, Brian A.,1972-
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Title & Author
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Emerging threats and security planning : : how should we decide what hypothetical threats to worry about? /\ Brian A. Jackson, David R. Frelinger.
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Publication Statement
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Santa Monica, CA :: RAND,, 2009.
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Series Statement
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RAND Corporation occasional paper series ;; OP-256-RC
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Page. NO
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1 online resource (x, 19 pages)
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ISBN
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0833048643
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: 1282451162
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: 6612451165
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: 9780833048646
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: 9781282451162
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: 9786612451164
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0833047310
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9780833047311
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Bibliographies/Indexes
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Includes bibliographical references (pages 17-19).
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Contents
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Cover; Preface; Contents; Tables; Summary; Emerging Threats and Security Planning: How Should We Decide What Hypothetical Threats to Worry About?; The Variety of Emerging Threats Challenging Security Planning; Framing a Middle-Ground Approach to Addressing Emerging Threats; Identifying Niche Threats; Prioritizing Emerging Threat Scenarios; Conclusions: Security Planning for the Niche and the Novel; References.
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Abstract
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"Concerns about how terrorists might attack in the future are central to the design of security efforts to protect both individual targets and the nation overall. In thinking about emerging threats, security planners are confronted by a panoply of possible future scenarios coming from sources ranging from the terrorists themselves to red-team brainstorming efforts to explore ways adversaries might attack in the future. This paper explores an approach to assessing emerging and/or novel threats and deciding whether, or how much, they should concern security planners by asking two questions: (1) Are some of the novel threats 'niche threats' that should be addressed within existing security efforts? (2) Which of the remaining threats are attackers most likely to execute successfully and should therefore be of greater concern for security planners? If threats can reasonably be considered niche threats, they can be prudently addressed in the context of existing security activities. If threats are unusual enough, suggest significant new vulnerabilities, or their probability or consequences means they cannot be considered lesser included cases within other threats, prioritizing them based on their ease of execution provides a guide for which threats merit the greatest concern and most security attention. This preserves the opportunity to learn from new threats yet prevents security planners from being pulled in many directions simultaneously by attempting to respond to every threat at once."--Page 4 of cover.
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Subject
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Civil defense-- United States.
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Subject
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National security-- United States-- Planning.
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Subject
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Strategic planning-- United States.
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Subject
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Terrorism-- United States-- Prevention.
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Subject
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Armies.
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Subject
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Civil defense.
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Subject
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Law, Politics Government.
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Subject
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Military Naval Science.
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Subject
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Military readiness-- Planning.
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Subject
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National security-- Planning.
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Subject
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POLITICAL SCIENCE-- Political Freedom Security-- Terrorism.
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Subject
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POLITICAL SCIENCE-- Terrorism.
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Subject
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Strategic planning.
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Subject
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Terrorism-- Prevention.
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Subject
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United States, Defenses, Planning.
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Subject
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United States.
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Dewey Classification
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355/.033573
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LC Classification
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UA23.J257 2009eb
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Added Entry
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Frelinger, Dave.
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