
Author/Contributor(s): | |
Publisher: | Oxford University Press, USA |
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Binding: | Hardcover |
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guard at one building's entrance enhances safety. The correct question is, Are any gains in security worth the funds expended? In this engaging, readable book, John Mueller and Mark Stewart apply risk and cost-benefit evaluation techniques to answer this very question. This analytical approach has been used throughout the world for decades by regulators, academics, and businesses--but, as a recent National Academy of
Science study suggests, it has never been capably applied by the people administering homeland security funds. Given the limited risk terrorism presents, expenses meant to lower it have for the most part simply not been worth it. For example, to be considered cost-effective, increased American
homeland security expenditures would have had each year to have foiled up to 1,667 attacks roughly like the one intended on Times Square in 2010--more than four a day. Cataloging the mistakes that the US has made--and continues to make--in managing homeland security programs, Terror, Security, and
Money has the potential to redirect our efforts toward a more productive and far more cost-effective course.