Secure Flight Program: Airline Passenger Screening Efforts

$185.00

Hellen E. Spear (Editor)

Series: Transportation Issues, Policies and R&D
BISAC: POL012000

Until recently, the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) had applied relatively uniform methods to screen airline passengers, focusing primarily on advances in screening technology to improve security and efficiency. TSA has recently shifted away from this approach, which assumes a uniform level of risk among all airline travelers, to one that focuses more intently on passengers thought to pose elevated security risks.

Risk-based passenger screening includes a number of initiatives that fit within a broader framework addressing security risks, but specifically emphasizes the detection and management of potential threats posed by passengers. This book examines changes to the Secure Flight program since 2009; TSA’s efforts to ensure that Secure Flight’s screening determinations for passengers are implemented at airport checkpoints; and the extent to which program performance measures assess progress toward goals. (Imprint: Nova)

Table of Contents

Table of Contents

Preface

Chapter 1 – Risk-Based Approaches to Airline Passenger Screening (pp. 1-30)
Bart Elias

Chapter 2 – Secure Flight: TSA Should Take Additional Steps to Determine Program Effectiveness (pp. 31-82)
United States Government Accountability Office

Chapter 3 – Secure Flight: TSA Could Take Additional Steps to Strengthen Privacy Oversight Mechanisms (pp. 83-116)
United States Government Accountability Office

Chapter 4 – The No Fly List: Procedural Due Process and Hurdles to Litigation (pp. 117-146)
Jared P. Cole

Index

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