Security Awareness in the 1990's

Security Awareness in the 1990's

Author: Lynn F. Fischer

Publisher: DIANE Publishing

Published: 1998-04

Total Pages: 213

ISBN-13: 0788148060

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Presents 32 feature articles from the Security Awareness Bulletin, representing the work of many authors. Includes: the emerging foreign intelligence threat (counterintelligence challenges; what is the threat?), espionage and espionage case studies (Randy Miles Jeffries; Albert Sombolay; Aldrich Ames); information systems security (security measures; Boeing hacker incident; understanding the computer criminal); security policy and programs (national OPSEC program; technical security; TSCM); industrial security (arms control inspections); and the threat to U.S. technology (export control violations; foreign economic threat).


Balancing the National Interest

Balancing the National Interest

Author: National Academy of Sciences, National Academy of Engineering, Institute of Medicine

Publisher: National Academies Press

Published: 1987-02-01

Total Pages: 336

ISBN-13: 0309037387

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The U.S. national security export controls systemâ€"which was instituted to impede Soviet acquisition of high technology from the Westâ€"is both necessary and appropriate. Balancing the National Interest provides a thorough analysis of this controls system, examining the current system of laws, regulations, international agreements, and organizations that control the international transfer of technology through industrial channels. Foreign Affairs calls it "the best on the subject to have been published in the 40 years that the United States has exercised controls on exports that might add to Soviet power."


Beyond 'Fortress America'

Beyond 'Fortress America'

Author: National Research Council

Publisher: National Academies Press

Published: 2009-05-30

Total Pages: 150

ISBN-13: 0309130263

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The national security controls that regulate access to and export of science and technology are broken. As currently structured, many of these controls undermine our national and homeland security and stifle American engagement in the global economy, and in science and technology. These unintended consequences arise from policies that were crafted for an earlier era. In the name of maintaining superiority, the U.S. now runs the risk of becoming less secure, less competitive and less prosperous. Beyond "Fortress America" provides an account of the costs associated with building walls that hamper our access to global science and technology that dampen our economic potential. The book also makes recommendations to reform the export control process, ensure scientific and technological competitiveness, and improve the non-immigrant visa system that regulates entry into the United States of foreign science and engineering students, scholars, and professionals. Beyond "Fortress America" contains vital information and action items for the President and policy makers that will affect the United States' ability to compete globally. Interested parties-including military personnel, engineers, scientists, professionals, industrialists, and scholars-will find this book a valuable tool for stemming a serious decline affecting broad areas of the nation's security and economy.