Date:
Fri, February 22, 2008 02:41:43 AMFrom:
Brian Adams - Homeland Defense Journal News & Training
Subject:
Intelligence Information Handling & Processing - Best Practices Training
To: kallyorama@gmail.com
To subscribe to your complimentary copy of Homeland Defense Journal monthly print magazine and to review additional security training workshops, courses and conferences, visit our home page at www.homelanddefensejournal.com
Special Announcement: The Integrated Physical Security
Handbook is now available at www.physicalsecurityhandbook.com. Published by
Homeland Defense Journal and written by security, physical security, and
architects this book and on-line reference library provide step-by-step guidance
to building and facility managers in government and private enterprise. This
book was just awarded their highest rating (5 STARS) by ASIS. You can
read the review at our web site at www.physicalsecurityhandbook.com.
Homeland Defense Journal Training Workshop (TM)
Homeland Security Intelligence Workshop
(Intelligence Collection, Processing, Analysis and
Operations)
March 27-28,
2008
Market*Access Training Center
4301 Wilson Boulevard, Suite
1003 (10th Floor)
Arlington, VA 22203
About the Homeland Security Intelligence Workshop
Homeland Security the protection of the full spectrum of our society
requires an unprecedented level of intelligence collection, processing, analysis
and sharing across all levels of government and the private sector. The historic
Homeland Security Bill and creation of the Department of Homeland Security
introduced new organizational, procedural and technical challenges to coordinate
people, processes and technologies to share information and coordinate
intelligence and law enforcement as never before. The needs to assure
constitutionally protected privacy, to protect information, while assuring
anticipatory analysis and warning pose ongoing challenges. Spanning federal
foreign and domestic intelligence to state and local law enforcement, Homeland
Security intelligence teams must provide extraordinary breadth of coverage and
depth of understanding to understand, anticipate and deter threats; they must
respond to the needs of policy makers, warning officers, crisis managers, and
first responders.
This unique workshop will help you explore the
emerging intelligence requirements, organizational and operations to conduct
Homeland Security intelligence activities, surveying the legal and information
requirements demanded by Congress, and the operational implementation across
intelligence and law enforcement. Focusing on practical implementation, the
Homeland Security Intelligence Workshop provides a strong introduction to the
methodologies of collection, processing and analysis. It also shows you how
these requirements can be practically achieved at the federal, state and local
levels in terms of operations (e.g. information sharing mechanisms and
intelligence fusion centers) and technology implementations. You will examine
the processes of information sharing, intelligence and warning,
cross-organization collaboration, and intelligence dissemination. The
operational (people and processes), systems (networked infrastructure) and
technical (standards, and technologies) perspectives of the Homeland Security
intelligence architecture are described. You will also discuss future directions
in the emerging threat and in the development of technologies to support
Homeland Security.
You will address
What policy and technology
challenges are posed by the needs for Homeland Security intelligence? What are
the alternative positions on these issues?
How do Homeland Security
Intelligence requirements drive the implementation of planning, direction,
collection, processing-analysis, and reporting? What new approaches are
available for collection, processing, collaboration, analysis and
dissemination?
How do Homeland Security Intelligence needs affect current
and future plans and initiatives in Federal, state and local intelligence and
law enforcement organizations and systems?
In addition to the course
materials, you will receive a CD containing the complete course notes and a
digital reference library of over 40 key reference documents on intelligence for
homeland security, organized by the outline of the workshop.
What You Will Learn
How
are U.S. Strategies in Homeland Security influencing current and future plans
and initiatives in federal, state and local intelligence operations and systems?
What does the Homeland Security intelligence architecture look like? What
information sharing processes and systems are required, and how are they being
implemented and integrated? What information tools will analysts, crisis
managers, and first responders require?
What resources are being allocated
for intelligence needs? Who conducts the operations, performs the R&D, and
who will implement and operate them?
How are the current intelligence
operations performed? What are the practical sources, collection and analysis
methods and how are they implemented?
What new technologies are being
developed to achieve the necessary capabilities for intelligence collection,
sharing, processing, analysis and dissemination?
PLUS, A review of over 20
current Homeland Security related intelligence activities across the
Intelligence Community, ODNI, DoD, DoJ, State, the ISACs, DARPA, IARPA and
others.
Who
Should Attend
This seminar has been designed for those responsible for:
Management, Development and Operations for Intelligence, Security and Counter
Terrorism
Development and operation of Information Sharing Systems &
Intelligence Enterprise Architectures
Investigation, Intelligence, Data
Fusion and Mining, and Analysis
Knowledge Management, Competitive &
Business Intelligence
Agenda Topics
Day 1 Intelligence, Collection and Processing
1. Homeland
Security Intelligence
National Strategy for Homeland Security and the
Intelligence role; Organizations and Operations of HS Intelligence (DHS, ODN -
Intelligence Community, DoJ, DoD, State, Local and other partners)
Principal
Legal Authorities for Conducting HS Intelligence: requirements, limitations,
challenges
Law Enforcement, Domestic Intelligence; US and the UK MI-5 Models
A Taxonomy of Homeland Security Threats
The Critical Issues: Strategic,
Legal, Operational, Tactical, and Technical
2. The Intelligence Process
The Homeland Security Intelligence Process: Cycle and Continuum
Managing
the Intelligence Process; Coordinating US Intelligence- Law Enforcement
Investigation Activities
Major Homeland Security Programs
Watch Lists,
Tear-lines, Multi-level Security and other requirements
CASE STUDY 1: What
we know about the Terrorist Surveillance Program from the DNI
3.
Intelligence Collection Sources and Methods
Open Source Intelligence
Human Intelligence Sources; categories, development and handling
Signals
and Network Sources; Capture and Analysis Methods
Geospatial Intelligence
Sources
MASINT, TECHINT and Special Sources
Forensic science, collection
and analysis
CASE STUDY 2: Methods of Lawful Intercept and CALEA
4.
Intelligence Processing
Overview of Processing Methods and Computational
Technologies
Automated Processes: Data Fusion (Deductive); Data Mining
(Inductive)
Integrating Data Fusion and Data Mining methods
Processing
and Dissemination in the Information Sharing Environment (ISE)
Day 2
Intelligence Analysis, Operations and the Future
5. Intelligence
Analysis
The basis of analysis and synthesis; Analytic methods
The
reasoning processes: Integrating Deductive, inductive, and abductive reasoning
The role of the human analyst and addressing cognitive shortcomings
Structuring analysis: Marshalling evidence, structuring hypotheses,
argumentation
Analysis-synthesis in the intelligence workflow
6.
Analysis-Synthesis Methods and Tools
A Taxonomy of Analytic Methods and
Associated Tools (Government and Commercial)
Temporal Analysis : Timelines
and Causal Inference
Link Analysis: Mapping Relationships
Geospatial
Analysis: Crime Mapping Methods
Counterdeception Analysis: Countering denial
and deception
CASE STUDY 3: Finding Saddam Hussein Coordinate
Geospatial-Social Analysis and Probes
7. Operational Implementation
Intelligence and Warning Functions Preventing Surprise
Collaborative
Intelligence and the Information Sharing Environment (ISE)
Intelligence and
Law Enforcement Networks and Systems; Intelligence Fusion Centers
Intelligence in Critical Infrastructure Protection
Reporting :
Dissemination of Intelligence
CASE STUDY 4: Intelligence Fusion Centers
within the Homeland Security Architecture
8. The Future: Threats and
Technology
Future Threat Projections: The National Intelligence Council
Outlook
Technologies A Roadmap of key Homeland Security Information
Technologies
DHS, DoD and Intelligence Community Programs in Relevant
Knowledge Discovery, Information Awareness, Collaborative Crisis Understanding,
Information Assurance and Survivability, and other Homeland Security
Intelligence related areas
About Your Instructor:
Ed Waltz is the Chief Scientist, Intelligence Innovation Division of BAE Systems Advanced Information Technology, where he leads hard intelligence target research. He has led numerous hard target Multi-INT studies and tool developments over the past decade for different agencies of the IC. He has interacted extensively with intelligence collectors, analysts and consumers to develop new technical capabilities. He holds a BSEE from the Case Institute of Technology and an MS in Computer, Information and Control Engineering from the University of Michigan. He has over 35 years of experience in developing and deploying signal processing, data fusion-mining and intelligence analysis capabilities. He is the author of Knowledge Management in the Intelligence Enterprise (Artech 2003), Information and Warfare Principles and Operations (Artech 1998), coauthor of Counterdeception Principles and Applications for National Security (2007) , Multisensor Data Fusion (Artech 1990), and coeditor of Multisensor Data Fusion (Kluwer 2001). He is a recipient of the DoD Joseph Mignona Data Fusion Award (2004), and became a Veridian Technology Fellow in 2002.
Registration Cost
Industry: $795 per person
Small Business: $745 per person
Government: $695 per person
Registration Options
[1] Register on-line at
www.marketaccess.org
[2] Phone Customer Service at (703) 807-2758
[3]
E-mail Customer Service at customerservice@marketaccess.org
[5] Mail the
Registration Form provided below to:
Homeland Defense Journal
4301 Wilson
Blvd. #1003, Arlington, VA 22203
Location Information
The workshop will be held in the NRECA Building at 4301 Wilson Boulevard (lobby level), Arlington, VA 22203. The event will be in room CC3. Public parking at the facility is available for $9 a day. The NRECA Building is just one block from the Ballston Metro Station in the orange line. Please note: the parking garage and a side entrance to the building is on Taylor Street.
Nearby Hotels Include:
* Holiday Inn, (703) 243-9800 (three blocks
from conference center) Ask for the Market*Access International rate of $201 for
weekdays and $129 for weekends. Subject to Availability Hilton Arlington Towers,
(703) 528-6000 (one block from conference center)
* Comfort Inn Ballston,
(703) 247-3399
CANCELLATION POLICY: You may designate a substitute in writing any time before the event. If you need to cancel your registration, you must send your notice in writing and will be subject to a $50 processing fee. No refunds are given for cancellations received one week prior to the event start date or later. PLEASE NOTE: No shows will be liable for the entire registration fee.
Email List Contact
If you wish to be removed from, or added to, our training announcements lists, see instructions below. Any questions regarding this email list, please refer to Brian Adams, Email List Manager at brian.adams@marketaccess.org
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Government: $695 per person
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Arlington, VA 22203
If you have questions about registration/payment,
please call Customer Service at (703) 807-2758. Thank you
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