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Given that the war on terror is currently being fought the way
crime typically is—after the fact—this country cannot protect
its citizens from future terrorist events solely in this way.
Instead, measures must be taken to actually stop terrorists before
they can attack. Here, the authors argue that government
anti-terrorism policy must pay much more attention to reducing
opportunities for terrorist attacks by protecting vulnerable
targets, controlling the tools and weapons used by terrorists, and
removing the conditions of everyday life that make these attacks
possible. While some of this work is being done on an ad hoc basis,
there are no recognized methods to guide the work, there is limited
experience on which to draw, and the government has no trained
professionals to oversee the work. In this book, the authors
address these deficiencies, and lay out a systematic approach for
reducing opportunities for terrorism. The current take-them-out
mindset may be the main reason why reducing opportunities for
terrorism has been so neglected by governments, but another
important reason is that the task seems so overwhelmingly
difficult. How can we possibly protect every vulnerable target or
person? How can we control all the everyday tools that terrorists
must use in carrying out their attacks? How can we control their
weapons when we cannot even keep guns out the hands of ordinary
criminals? In this book, the authors show that these tasks are
indeed manageable. They take readers through the methods for
preventing terrorism and the policies that will assist in this
important work. They show that in order to protect the country from
terrorists, security forces must do what the terrorists do:
identify vulnerable targets, analyze their specific weaknesses,
consider the tools and weapons needed to attack, and assess access
to the targets. Once these steps are taken, security agencies can
then provide appropriate protection, limit accessibility,
anticipate the forces needed to combat a potential attack, and plan
carefully for an attack if it does occur. By outsmarting the
terrorists security forces undertake the same analysis of
vulnerabilities and opportunities that terrorists themselves
undertake in planning their operations, and can more effectively
defeat them before they strike. This books shows how this approach
works and can succeed.
This book, written by two leading authorities in the field,
provides a systematic application of concepts of situational crime
prevention to internet and e-commerce crime, exploring ways in
which concepts of crime prevention developed in other contexts can
be fruitfully applied in this new environment. Their argument is
that situational crime prevention works, and is ideally suited to
proving the means of developing measures to combat rapidly growing
e-commerce crime. Chapters in the book seek to identify the
specific opportunities and transactions in which crime can occur in
the e-commerce environment, and the different kinds of information
which are crime targets --identified as intellectual property,
intelligence, information systems and services of various kinds
(banking, purchasing etc). Consumer products are also examined with
a view to identifying the elements that make them particularly
vulnerable to theft.
This book sets out to investigate the relationship between crime
and the design and planning of housing, and to produce practical
recommendations to help architects and planners to reduce crime.
The book builds upon and updates research originally published in
Crime Free Housing (1991), providing an easily accessible, high
quality, and well presented account of crime and housing layout.
The book focuses on strategies for reducing four different types of
crime through better design, including: Burglarydiscouraging people
from trying to break into houses; Car crimeproviding a safe place
to park cars; Theft around the homeprotecting the front of the
house, as well as items in gardens, sheds, and garages; Criminal
damageminimizing malicious damage to property.
Suicide prevention is a major goal of the Public Health Service of
the US government. This has been the case since the 1960s when the
National Institute of Mental Health established a center for the
study and prevention of suicide. Since then, however, the knowledge
and research gathered has not bought about the reduction of
suicide. Suicide: Closing the Exits was written to change this
trend. This book reports a program of research concerned with
preventing suicide by restricting access to lethal agents, such as
guns, drugs, and carbon monoxide. It may seem implausible that
deeply unhappy people could be prevented from killing themselves by
"closing the exits," but the idea is not a new one and has been
discussed widely in the literature. The authors argue that
restricting access to lethal agents should be considered a major
preventive strategy, along with the psychiatric treatment of
depressed and suicidal individuals and the establishment of suicide
prevention centers to counsel those in crisis. Suicide represents a
major contribution to the literature. As such, it should be read by
all medical practitioners, policy makers, and psychologists.
Suicide prevention is a major goal of the Public Health Service of
the US government. This has been the case since the 1960s when the
National Institute of Mental Health established a center for the
study and prevention of suicide. Since then, however, the knowledge
and research gathered has not bought about the reduction of
suicide. Suicide: Closing the Exits was written to change this
trend. This book reports a program of research concerned with
preventing suicide by restricting access to lethal agents, such as
guns, drugs, and carbon monoxide. It may seem implausible that
deeply unhappy people could be prevented from killing themselves by
"closing the exits," but the idea is not a new one and has been
discussed widely in the literature. The authors argue that
restricting access to lethal agents should be considered a major
preventive strategy, along with the psychiatric treatment of
depressed and suicidal individuals and the establishment of suicide
prevention centers to counsel those in crisis. Suicide represents a
major contribution to the literature. As such, it should be read by
all medical practitioners, policy makers, and psychologists.
Herein lie the answers to crime and disorder. So many people become
dispirited, fatalistic or angry about crime instead of seeing crime
problems, like business setbacks, as challenges or even
opportunities. This book sets out a clear, systematic and
demonstrably successful strategy for reducing the temptations and
opportunities for crime. You cannot change the travelling public or
the communities which public transport serves, but you can change
the immediate circumstances and surroundings that you present to
people, you can re-think and reinvigorate your service offering,
you can recruit help from other agencies, from staff and even those
who ride the system, and you can make the transition from being
reactive to being ahead of the game. The theory is backed up by
concrete examples of how and why and where smart-thinking has
worked before to outflank crime-this is not just off-the-shelf
self-help philosophy but a compendium of real-world best practice.
What's more, you can often make money, or at least save a lot of
money, by doing the right thing, and this book tells you how. Nick
Ross,BBC Crimewatch UK, Chairman, UCL Jill Dando Institute of Crime
Science Advisory Board
This book sets out to investigate the relationship between crime
and the design and planning of housing, and to produce practical
recommendations to help architects and planners to reduce crime. It
builds upon and updates research originally published in Crime Free
Housing (1991), providing an easily accessible, high quality and
well presented account of crime and housing layout. The
recommendations of this book focus on ways of reducing four
different types of crime through better design: burglary - a
strategy to discourage people trying to break into houses car crime
- a strategy for providing a safe place to park cars theft around
the home - a strategy for protecting the front of house, items in
gardens, sheds and garages safe criminal damage - a strategy to
minimize malicious damage to property.
So many people have become dispirited, fatalistic, or angry about
crime instead of seeing crime problems as setbacks, challenges, or
even opportunities. This book sets out a clear, systematic, and
demonstrably successful strategy for reducing the temptations and
opportunities for crime in the area of public transportation.
Instead of changing the traveling public or the communities which
public transport serves, what needs to change are the immediate
circumstances and surroundings presented to people. Services
offered can be rethought and reinvigorated, recruiting assistance
from other agencies, staff, and even from those who ride the
transportation system. Its a matter of making the transition from
being reactive to being ahead of the game. This study is backed up
by concrete examples of how, why, and where smart-thinking has
worked before to outflank transportation crime. Contents include:
crime and disorder on public transport; understanding local
transport crime problems; anti-soc
Written by two leading authorities in the field, this book provides
a systematic application of concepts of situational crime
prevention to internet and e-commerce crime. The book argues that
situational crime prevention works and is ideally suited to proving
the means of developing measures to combat rapidly growing
e-commerce crime. Chapters in the book identify the specific
opportunities and transactions in which crime can occur in the
e-commerce environment. A variety of techniques to counter
e-commerce crime are identified, underpinned by seeking to increase
the effort the criminal must make to carry out crime, to increase
the perceived risk of crime, to reduce the anticipated rewards of
crime, and to remove excuses for the criminal. ... Contents:
Preface; Situational crime prevention in the information society:
Situational crime prevention - Virtual situations - Opportunity
structure and social structure - Situational culture - Enduring
qualities of situations - Situations as pre
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