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Chapter Seventeen: The Bureaucracy of Homeland Security

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Title: Chapter Seventeen: The Bureaucracy of Homeland Security


1
Chapter SeventeenThe Bureaucracy of
Homeland Security
2
Bureaucracy The Weberian Ideal
3
Bureaucracy The Weberian Ideal
  • Max Weber
  • Max Weber coined the term bureaucracy to describe
    professional, rational organizations
  • People organize for a purpose and their
    organizations should accomplish that purpose
  • The process is rational There is a problem,
    people organize to solve it, they work together,
    and the problem is solved
  • Bureaucracy should be designed to accomplish
    specific purposes

4
Bureaucracy The Weberian Ideal
  • The ideal bureaucracy
  • In Webers ideal, labor is to be divided into
    specific functions or bureaus, and all the
    bureaus or functions of the organization are to
    assemble logically to produce the whole
  • Modern bureaucratic management ideally comes from
    leaders who excel at leadership
  • Every aspect of the organization centers on
    rational efficiency

5
Bureaucracy The Weberian Ideal
  • Views concerning the expanded homeland security
    bureaucracy
  • Supporters of one position maintain that
    consolidating power is efficient. They argue that
    a large bureaucracy with a clear mission will
    empower the security forces to perform their
    mission
  • Proponents of a second position suggest that
    decentralizing power personalizes services and
    helps develop links to communities. They believe
    localized, informal offices are more adept at
    recognizing and handling problems

6
The Role of Law Enforcement and Intelligence
7
The Role of Law Enforcement and Intelligence
  • The lead agency for counterterrorism FBI
  • Under Director Robert Mueller the FBIs charge is
    to prevent terrorism
  • The FBI is to coordinate intelligence gathering
    and sharing activities with the Border Patrol,
    Secret Service, and CIA
  • The FBI is to operate as partners with state and
    local law enforcement.
  • Finally, since the FBI is in the Department of
    Justice, it is to coordinate activities with DHS
    and the Department of Defense

8
The Role of Law Enforcement and Intelligence
  • A new role for the CIA
  • Originally, the CIA was supposed to be the agency
    that would coordinate al U.S. intelligence data
  • The CIA was to operate apart from U.S. criminal
    law
  • Today, the CIA is to cooperate fully with the FBI
    on counterterrorism intelligence

9
The Role of Law Enforcement and Intelligence
  • The Department of Homeland Security
  • DHS is also charged with counterterrorism
  • DHS includes law enforcement agencies, such as
    the Secret Service, the Border Patrol, the new
    Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the U.S.
    Customs Service, and other agencies
  • It has its own military, and its own intelligence
    section

10
The Role of Law Enforcement and Intelligence
  • Department of Defense
  • The DOD augments civilian defense, provides
    special operation capabilities, and interdicts
    terrorists before they arrive in the United
    States
  • The main military role in counterterrorism is to
    project American power overseas

11
The Role of Law Enforcement and Intelligence
  • The array of American power
  • In theory, led by the FBI and the CIA, multiple
    agencies will work together to gain information,
    analyze it together, and share the results with
    every bureaucracy concerned with homeland
    security
  • The FBI and the CIA are to create a cooperative,
    sharing atmosphere with thousands of state and
    local law enforcement agencies
  • DHS calls on the entire system of homeland
    security bureaucracies to form relations with
    local communities and private industry

12
Protecting the Borders
13
Protecting the Borders
  • Agencies protecting the American borders
  • The Secret Service
  • The Coast Guard
  • Customs and Border Protection
  • Immigration and Customs Enforcement
  • The Federal Law Enforcement Training Center
  • The Office of Domestic Preparedness
  • The Transportation Security Administration

14
Protecting the Borders
  • Areas of vulnerability on the American borders
  • Long stretches of unprotected areas along the
    northern and southern borders are open to
    infiltration
  • More than three hundred seaports must be secured
  • The DHS has agencies responsible for securing
    entry into the United States at airports, and it
    is responsible for protecting air travel once the
    entry points are protected
  • Border agents are responsible for staffing entry
    points along the northern and southern borders
  • Another DHS agency has the task of accounting for
    noncitizens within U.S. Borders

15
Protecting the Borders
  • DHS protecting the borders
  • DHS cooperates with the FBI and CIA
  • DHS has increased the number of people who patrol
    the border
  • DHS uses technology, such as biometric
    measuring-- that is, identification systems based
    on body characteristics such as finger prints,
    facial patterns, or DNA

16
Protecting the Borders
  • Criticisms of DHS activities
  • Activities may not be effective
  • Some DHS policies have not been popular with
    other countries
  • Many local governments feel they need the tryst
    and cooperation of foreigners living in their
    areas

17
Protecting the Borders
  • 9-11 Commission Reports recommendations for
    border security
  • A single agency should screen crossings with a
    single format
  • An investigative agency should be established to
    monitor aliens in the United States
  • The DHS should gather intelligence on the way
    terrorists travel, and combine intelligence and
    law enforcement activities to hamper their
    mobility
  • There should be a standardize method for
    obtaining identification and wanted passports
    using biometric measures

18
Infrastructure Protection
19
Infrastructure Protection
  • Identification and protection of critical
    infrastructures
  • DHS states that law enforcement agencies will
    need to develop cooperative links with public and
    private bureaucracies, including private security
    organizations, educational institutions, and
    health care systems

20
Infrastructure Protection
  • Criticisms
  • Too little is being done
  • A year after September 11, the federal government
    had failed to release resources to state and
    local governments
  • Federal law enforcement does little to assist
    private security

21
Infrastructure Protection
  • Richard Clarkes threats facing the nation of
    infrastructures
  • Most computer systems are vulnerable to viruses
  • The nations power system and technological
    organizations that support it are vulnerable to
    disruptions
  • The Internet and computer networks that support
    these systems are vulnerable to attack

22
Infrastructure Protection
  • Protection of the infrastructure
  • According to Clarke, the state and local law
    enforcement should not play the leading role in
    infrastructure protection
  • Protection of the infrastructure comes when
    specialists in crime fighting and protection
    establish critical links with the public and
    private organizations serving Americas
    infrastructure
  • The police should be linked to security forces
    already associated with infrastructure functions
  • State and local law enforcement agencies must
    establish formal and informal networks with the
    organizations in their jurisdictions, and these
    networks should expand to a cooperative federal
    system

23
DHS, Security, and Police Work
24
DHS, Security, and Police Work
  • Local law enforcement agencies
  • The IACP believes that local law enforcement
    agencies will become the hinge on which all local
    efforts pivot
  • Homeland security entails coordinating efforts
    from several local organizations, including
    private industry, public service, health care
    systems, and law enforcement
  • As local agencies become involved in homeland
    security, they must become involved in assessing
    threats in their jurisdictions. They must also
    learn to recognize possible items that may add to
    national defense intelligence and develop
    routines to forward such information

25
DHS, Security, and Police Work
  • Police and gathering defense intelligence
  • The process of gathering defense intelligence is
    not readily apparent in American policing
  • Police work is political, and law enforcement
    officers think locally

26
DHS, Security, and Police Work
  • Abstract reasoning skills
  • State and local officers are not rewarded for
    thinking in terms of international issues or
    national security
  • Chiefs and sheriffs do not usually praise
    abstract reasoning, and higher education has done
    little to help this situation
  • Criminal justice programs do not produce
    abstract, critical thinkers for law enforcement
  • To combat terrorism, security forces require
    groups of people with abstract reasoning skills,
    knowledge of international politics and history,
    and specialized expertise in particular regions.
    However, the ethos behind policing rejects this
    logic

27
Possible Approaches for Homeland Security
Bureaucracies
28
Possible Approaches for Homeland Security
Bureaucracies
  • Legal alternatives to police participation in
    homeland defense
  • Gathering security information in the course of
    criminal investigations
  • Combine training in alertness with specialized
    training for selected officers

29
Possible Approaches for Homeland Security
Bureaucracies
  • The FBIs Joint Terrorism Task Force (JTTF)
  • The JTTF combines local, state, and various
    federal police officers, as well as corrections
    officials and prosecutors, in regional units
    designed to combat terrorism

30
Possible Approaches for Homeland Security
Bureaucracies
  • Opposition to the JTTF
  • Local governments have refused to allow their
    police forces to assist in counterterrorist
    activities
  • Civil libertarians see the formation of a JTTF as
    too great of a consolidation of government power
  • State and federal courts may well limit the role
    of local agencies in homeland security

31
Possible Approaches for Homeland Security
Bureaucracies
  • Other democracies who have had their police
    engage in intelligence gathering activities and
    have expanded their role in national defense
  • France
  • Germany
  • Canada
  • The British

32
Bureaucratic Inhibitors
33
Bureaucratic Inhibitors
  • Public service organizations have foibles that
    emerge in the everyday social construction of
    reality
  • The FBI versus Police and Sheriffs Departments
  • Many state and local police executives do not
    trust the FBI, and the attitude extends down
    through the ranks of law enforcement agencies
  • The relationship between the FBI and state and
    local law enforcement must improve

34
Bureaucratic Inhibitors
  • Federal Law Enforcement Rivalries
  • Organizations on every level frequently act out
    of self-interest rather than concern with an
    overall mission
  • Advocates of Local Control
  • Some people feel cooperation between state and
    local law enforcement will result in the de fact
    concentration of police power

35
Bureaucratic Inhibitors
  • The Problem of Legal Bureaucracy
  • The criminal justice system is actually not a
    system at all, but a multifaceted bureaucracy
    with intersecting layers
  • While police and correctional institutions
    represent the executive branch of the government,
    the courts autonomously belong to the judicial
    branch

36
Bureaucratic Inhibitors
  • The Bureaucracy Problem
  • Change can happen, and may even be welcome, if
    federal agencies enter into cooperative
    relationships with their local counterparts
  • Large organizations are difficult to manage, and
    problems increase rapidly when organizational
    effectiveness requires cooperation on several
    levels
  • If the DHS can create effective partnerships with
    intelligence and law enforcement agencies on the
    federal level, it could focus attention on these
    issues. However, homeland security becomes a
    problem much larger than gathering and analyzing
    information
  • The problem appears in preventing terrorism, and
    preventing requires bureaucratic change

37
Stephen Flynns Critique of the Ideal
38
Stephen Flynns Critique of the Ideal
  • Two mistakes made by the United States
  • Homeland security has been separated from
    national security
  • The infrastructure is vulnerable to attack
  • Homeland security should be part of a national
    strategy to defend the United States

39
Stephen Flynns Critique of the Ideal
  • Weapons of mass destruction
  • According to the CIA, the most likely scenario
    for smuggling weapons of mass destruction into
    the United States is by sea
  • The Bush administration has done very little to
    protect the nations 361 seaports

40
Stephen Flynns Critique of the Ideal
  • The nations infrastructure
  • In the 2005 military budget, the infrastructure
    for the entire nation will receive only 2.6
    billion, whereas the DOD was allotted 7.6
    billion
  • Flynn sees a problem in strategic thinking in DHS
    and other agencies
  • Increased border protection will not protect
    America against terrorist attacks

41
Stephen Flynns Critique of the Ideal
  • Jihadists are aware of the vulnerabilities in the
    infrastructure
  • The safest and most effective way to hit America
    is to strike the infrastructure
  • Reinvent homeland security
  • DHS and other federal bureaucracies should think
    of security from a broad perspective

42
Stephen Flynns Critique of the Ideal
  • Flynns recommendations for the future
  • The best current model for homeland security is
    the air industry
  • When bureaucracies recover from failure, people
    will believe in their own safety and continue to
    function
  • Americans must be able to absorb a major attack
    and continue to function
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