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Organized by
the Homeland Security Committee of the IEEE Boston Section and presented
by: Lennart E. Long, MSEE, CPP qpDirector of Technical Operations Boston
Office, Applied Research Associates
With Guest
Lectures by:
Dennis
Treece, Director of Corporate Security for Massport – overview from
the practitioner’s perspective
Bill
Baukus, American Science and Engineering – X-ray Systems
Prof.
Andrzej Rucinski, University of New Hampshire & National
Infrastructure Institute – biometrics and Systems #Engineering
Garry
Murphy, Weapons of Mass Destruction Consultant – Chemical detection
systems
Ted
Kochanski, MU-Vision, Inc. – Nuclear Methods of Inspection
John
Bartolomuci, CCTV and Security System Integration
Industrial
Security Users {TBD}
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As President Bush has said: “The terrorists need to be
right only once. Free nations need to be right 100 percent of the time.”
In What We Saw in London, Stephen J. Hadley, National Security Adviser and
Frances Fragos Townsend, Homeland Security Adviser to the President
recently wrote: “….the people of London responded bravely. Their courage
over these harrowing few weeks reminds us that those who love freedom have
prevailed against such evil before and can do so again. The London attacks
vividly demonstrated the challenge we face. We need all citizens, everyone
who loves freedom, to join in the fight.” Therefore, all of us need to
know enough about security technologies, principles and their application,
to be intelligent consumers of security services.
Security Topics:
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Physical Security Principles and Devices
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Access Control
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CCTV
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Perimeter Protection
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Area Sensors
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Risk Assessment
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Elements of Threat
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Vulnerability Analysis
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Countermeasures
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Risk Assessment
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How do we Measure Security Effectiveness?
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Information Security
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Blast Assessment
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Incident Response
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What to do before, during and after a security
incident
Benefits of Attending
Opening keynote by Dennis Treece, an expert’s expert
and user of security systems, will help address these questions and
frame this introduction to Security for the non-Expert
Industry leaders will share their practical
experiences and lessons learned.
Who Should Attend:
Executives and technical managers involved with
specifying and implementing security
Security professionals working in one area interested
in updating their information about other areas
Engineers and others interested in security awareness
Outline:
April 12
Segment 1: Introduction
Segment 2: Physical Security Principles
April 19
Segment 3: Risk Assessment - I
Segment 4: Risk Assessment - II
April 26
Segment 5: Occupant Emergency Procedures
Segment 6: Facility Architecture
May 3
Segment 7: Security Devices – 101 — overview
Segment 8: Policy, Procedures, Practices and
Training
May 10
Segment 9: Security Devices – II – perimeter and
area sensors
Segment 10: Security Devices – III – Biometrics
and Chemical Sensors
May 17
Segment 11: System Integration
Segment 12: Security Devices IV — X-ray Systems
and Nuclear Methods
Background
The July bombings of the London Underground and Tourist
Hotels in Sharm El-Sheikh, Egypt re-awakened the Civilized World to the
reality that global terrorism is a persistent and omnipresent threat to
our way of life. Since more than 2/3 of the critical infrastructure is in
the hands of the private sector, much of future homeland security depends
on operational spending and investment by private industry. As in the
case of 9/11/2001, the initial response of our society was to increase
security manpower and install more existing manual-intensive equipment.
Meanwhile, cell phones, digital cameras, Wifi Networks, are inexorable
following Moore’s Law in performance, adding functionality and decreasing
in price.
This Lecture Series follows the path of the 5 IEEE
Conferences on Technologies for Homeland Security. It is structured to
provide users of security with an overview of the field to be intelligent
consumers of security solutions. It also provides technology developers
with some background in practical aspects of the field. For information on
the conference, see, http://ieeeboston.org