Regional joint border commands : a pathway to improving collaboration and effectiveness for border control

CHDS State/Local === Control of the U.S. border is a primary concern for the Department of Homeland Security. Three of the department's components have major roles in providing border security and control. With increasing costs and constantly changing threats, it is vital that all border org...

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Main Author: Carr, Alan.
Other Authors: Supinski, Stanley
Published: Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School 2012
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10945/4400
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spelling ndltd-nps.edu-oai-calhoun.nps.edu-10945-44002014-11-27T16:05:15Z Regional joint border commands : a pathway to improving collaboration and effectiveness for border control Carr, Alan. Supinski, Stanley Bach, Robert Naval Postgraduate School (U.S.) CHDS State/Local Control of the U.S. border is a primary concern for the Department of Homeland Security. Three of the department's components have major roles in providing border security and control. With increasing costs and constantly changing threats, it is vital that all border organizations work together collaboratively. This thesis looks at two new ideas, border regionalization and joint regional border commands, and compares them with current efforts to increase collaboration. By establishing border regions, DHS can use threat based planning in each region to allow all border control components to focus on threats specific to their region while also increasing the level effectiveness of resources. Joint regional border commands offer even greater advantages in collaboration between components and resource usage. The DoD model for regional combatant commands is used as an example of how DHS can take advantage of the lessons learned with this recommendation. 2012-03-14T17:41:45Z 2012-03-14T17:41:45Z 2009-12 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10945/4400 503129841 Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School
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description CHDS State/Local === Control of the U.S. border is a primary concern for the Department of Homeland Security. Three of the department's components have major roles in providing border security and control. With increasing costs and constantly changing threats, it is vital that all border organizations work together collaboratively. This thesis looks at two new ideas, border regionalization and joint regional border commands, and compares them with current efforts to increase collaboration. By establishing border regions, DHS can use threat based planning in each region to allow all border control components to focus on threats specific to their region while also increasing the level effectiveness of resources. Joint regional border commands offer even greater advantages in collaboration between components and resource usage. The DoD model for regional combatant commands is used as an example of how DHS can take advantage of the lessons learned with this recommendation.
author2 Supinski, Stanley
author_facet Supinski, Stanley
Carr, Alan.
author Carr, Alan.
spellingShingle Carr, Alan.
Regional joint border commands : a pathway to improving collaboration and effectiveness for border control
author_sort Carr, Alan.
title Regional joint border commands : a pathway to improving collaboration and effectiveness for border control
title_short Regional joint border commands : a pathway to improving collaboration and effectiveness for border control
title_full Regional joint border commands : a pathway to improving collaboration and effectiveness for border control
title_fullStr Regional joint border commands : a pathway to improving collaboration and effectiveness for border control
title_full_unstemmed Regional joint border commands : a pathway to improving collaboration and effectiveness for border control
title_sort regional joint border commands : a pathway to improving collaboration and effectiveness for border control
publisher Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10945/4400
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