Strategic Security Management: A Risk Assessment Guide for Decision Makers Written for security professionals and other professionals responsible for making security decisions as well as for security management and criminal justice students, this text provides a fresh perspective on the risk assessment process. T
TITLE | : | Strategic Security Management: A Risk Assessment Guide for Decision Makers |
AUTHOR | : | |
RATING | : | 4.58 (482 Votes) |
ASIN | : | 0123708974 |
FORMAT TYPE | : | Hardcover |
NUMBER of PAGES | : | 416 Pages |
PUBLISH DATE | : | 2006-10-26 |
GENRE | : |
Strategic Security Management supports data driven security that is measurable, quantifiable and practical. Written for security professionals and other professionals responsible for making security decisions as well as for security management and criminal justice students, this text provides a fresh perspective on the risk assessment process. It also provides food for thought on protecting an organization’s assets, giving decision makers the foundation needed to climb the next step up the corporate ladder.Strategic Security Management fills a definitive need for guidelines on security best practices. The book also explores the process of in-depth security analysis for decision making, and provides the reader with the framework needed to apply security concepts to specific scenarios. Advanced threat, vulnerability, and risk assessment techniques are presented as the b
Editorial : "This book takes on the ambitious goal of bridging the gap between theory and reality in risk-assessment-based security management - and achieves it handily." (Jack Dowling, Security Management)"Two words describe this text: information packed. The intended audience is a large one, including security professionals, security managers with decision-making responsibilty, and criminal justice students. This book is a valuable asset for them all." (Jack Dowling, Security Management)
Unfortunately, limiting the scope to his personal expertise both enormously understates the size of America's health care problem, and unfairly skews the focus towards insurance firms. I'm pleased to tell you I was horribly off-base in this assumption.
Rich Merritt was the perfect gay man to enter the Marine Corps. The title of this book, "Deadly Spin: An Insurance Company Insider Speaks Out on How Corporate PR is Killing Health Care and Deceiving Americans" is a bit off-putting. The book's background is about second world war and how the rationale behind lots of decisions could be self interest of individuals, stupidity and profiteering. Not due to the author's writing, but his story lacks.. It was written with remarkable frankness by a genuinely gifted and precocious human being who experienced all of the typical anxieties of her adolescent contemporaries, although almost no
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