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System Under Stress: Homeland Security and American Politics
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Richard Sylves
Published/Copyright:
October 26, 2004
System Under Stress: Homeland Security and American Politics by Donal F. Kettl examines the development of homeland security policy and administration. Creation of the Department of Homeland Security has brought together disparate fields with a new common goal. Kettl synthesizes policy from these fields while examining how federal, state, and local government officials responded to the 9/11 disaster and the anthrax letter incident.
Keywords: homeland security policy; homeland security administration; emergency management policy; homeland security and politics; homeland security decision-making
Published Online: 2004-10-26
©2011 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/Boston
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Keywords for this article
homeland security policy;
homeland security administration;
emergency management policy;
homeland security and politics;
homeland security decision-making
Articles in the same Issue
- Research Article
- Thinking the Inevitable: Suicide Attacks in America and the Design of Effective Public Safety Policies
- Risks of Terrorism to Information Technology and to Critical Interdependent Infrastructures
- Why Do Public Health Practitioners Hesitate?
- Volunteerism, Disasters and Homeland Security: The AmeriCorps*National Civilian Community Corps (NCCC) and Community Preparedness
- Prudence or Panic? Preparedness Exercises, Counterterror Mobilization, and Media Coverage - Dark Winter, TOPOFF 1 and 2.
- Communication/News
- Tips and Trends for Homeland Security and Critical Infrastructure Protection
- Asia Stages a Dismal Response to Bird Flu Virus: An Emergency Management Diagnosis
- Mission Impossible? The Challenge of Implementing an Integrated Homeland Security Strategy
- Digital Dental Radiography
- Book Review
- Emergency Response and Emergency Management Law: Cases and Materials
- Preventing Earthquake Disasters - The Grand Challenge in Earthquake Engineering - A Research Agenda for the Network for Earthquake Engineering Simulation (NEES)
- Terrorism and Disaster Management: Preparing Healthcare Leaders for the New Reality
- System Under Stress: Homeland Security and American Politics