Critical infrastructure protection in homeland security defending a networked nation
""...excellent for use as a text in information assurance or cyber-security courses...I strongly advocate that professors...examine this book with the intention of using it in their programs."" (Computing Reviews.com, March 22, 2007)""The book is written as a student te...
Otros Autores: | |
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Formato: | Libro electrónico |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Hoboken, New Jersey :
John Wiley & Sons, Inc
2015.
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Edición: | Second edition |
Materias: | |
Ver en Biblioteca Universitat Ramon Llull: | https://discovery.url.edu/permalink/34CSUC_URL/1im36ta/alma991009849110906719 |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Critical Infrastructure Protection in Homeland Security: Defending a Networked Nation; Copyright; Contents; Preface; How to Use this Book; Acknowledgment; Part I Origins of Homeland Security and Critical Infrastructure Protection Policy; Chapter 1 Origins of Critical Infrastructure Protection; 1.1 Recognition; 1.2 Natural Disaster Recovery; 1.3 Definitional Phase; 1.4 Public-Private Cooperation; 1.5 Federalism: Whole of Government; 1.6 Infrastructure Protection within DHS; 1.7 Implementing a Risk Strategy; 1.7.1 Risk-Informed Decision-Making; 1.7.2 Resilience-Informed Decision-Making
- 1.7.3 Prevention or Response? 1.8 Analysis; 1.8.1 The PPP Conundrum; 1.8.2 The Information-Sharing Conundrum; 1.8.3 Climate Change Conundrum; 1.8.4 The Funding Conundrum; 1.8.5 Spend 80% on 20% of the Country; 1.9 Exercises; References; Part II Theory and Foundations; Chapter 2 Risk Strategies; 2.1 EUT; 2.1.1 Threat-Asset Pairs; 2.2 PRA and Fault Trees; 2.2.1 An Example: Your Car; 2.3 MBRA and Resource Allocation; 2.3.1 Another Example: Redundant Power; 2.4 PRA in the Supply Chain; 2.5 Protection versus Response; 2.6 Threat Is an Output; 2.7 Bayesian Belief Networks; 2.8 A BN for Threat
- 2.9 Risk of a Natural Disaster 2.10 Earthquakes; 2.11 Black Swans and Risk; 2.12 Black Swan Floods; 2.13 Are Natural Disasters Getting Worse?; 2.14 Black Swan al Qaeda Attacks; 2.15 Black Swan Pandemic; 2.16 Risk and Resilience; 2.17 Exercises; References; Chapter 3 Theories of Catastrophe; 3.1 NAT; 3.2 Blocks and Springs; 3.3 Bak's Punctuated Equilibrium Theory; 3.4 TOC; 3.4.1 The State Space Diagram; 3.5 The U.S. Electric Power Grid; 3.6 POE; 3.6.1 The Great Recessions; 3.6.2 Too Much Money; 3.7 Competitive Exclusion; 3.7.1 Gause's Law; 3.7.2 The Self-Organizing Internet; 3.7.3 A Monoculture
- 3.8 POR 3.9 Resilience of Complex Infrastructure Systems; 3.9.1 Expected Utility and Risk; 3.9.2 SOC; 3.9.3 TOC; 3.9.4 POE and nonlinearity; 3.9.5 CEP and loss of redundancy; 3.9.6 POR and percolation; 3.10 Emergence; 3.10.1 Opposing Forces in Emergent CIKR; 3.11 Exercises; References; Chapter 4 Complex CIKR Systems; 4.1 CIKR as Networks; 4.1.1 Emergence; 4.1.2 Classes of CIKR Networks; 4.1.3 Self-Organized Networks; 4.2 Cascading CIKR Systems; 4.2.1 The Fundamental Resilience Equation; 4.2.2 Targeted Attacks; 4.3 Network Flow Resilience; 4.4 Paradox of Redundancy
- 4.4.1 Link Percolation and Robustness 4.4.2 Node Percolation and Robustness; 4.4.3 Blocking Nodes; 4.5 Network Risk; 4.5.1 Crude Oil and KeystoneXL; 4.5.2 MBRA Network Resource Allocation; 4.6 Exercises; Reference; Part III Individual Sectors; Chapter 5 Communications; 5.1 Early Years; 5.2 Regulatory Structure; 5.3 The Architecture of the Communication Sector; 5.3.1 Physical Infrastructure; 5.3.2 Wireless Networks; 5.3.3 Extraterrestrial Communication; 5.3.4 LESs; 5.3.5 Cellular Networks; 5.3.6 Generations; 5.3.7 Wi-Fi Technology; 5.4 Risk Analysis; 5.4.1 Importance of Carrier Hotels
- 5.4.2 Network Analysis