The Monitor is the Institute's homeland security and resilience publication which is produced ten times a year. Encompassing a range of issues at strategic, operational and tactical levels relating to man-made, man-assisted and natural emergencies and disasters.Issue: Nov 2007, Vol. 6, No. 9
Litvinenko: One Year On
Free Access: Andy Oppenheimer considers the lessons learned from the poisoning of Alexander Litvinenko with polonium-210.
Andy Oppenheimer
Weapons of Mass Destruction in Historical Perspective
Kathryn McLaughlin of the BioWeapons Prevention Program (BWPP) in Geneva examines what the history of chemical, biological and radiological weapons may be able to tell us about their likely use in the future.
Kathryn McLaughlin
Corporate Intelligence
Free Access: Private companies are increasingly using highly trained and experienced intelligence staff to ensure security. Chris Pope considers how closely they could and should work with the UK’s Security Services.
Chris Pope
At Risk from Air Travel
Monitor looks at how well the contagious diseases contingencies plans in place at Glasgow Airport coped with twenty-seven passengers falling ill on a plane returning from the Caribbean.
The PortSTEP programme
Lana McGill looks back on PortSTEP, a two-year programme of port security exercises in the US that has incorporated 40 exercises in 25 states and has built a foundation for port security best practice in the future.
Lana McGill
Silencing Terrorism
Tony McNulty MP, Home Office Minister for Security, Counter-Terrorism, Policing and Crime explains how and why proscription is an important tool in the fight against terrorism.
Tony McNulty