Wednesday, December 12, 2007

GeoCritical Terror Index Score

GeoCritical, LLC announces the release of the GeoCritical Terror Index Score (GTIS), an analytical tool which allows end users to assess the vulnerability of their corporate assets relative to the location of historical terror attacks. GTIS creates simple to understand geographic representations of extensive terrorism data, drawn from official US government sources and analyzed by experienced counter-terrorism subject matter experts, to assist your corporate stakeholders with mitigating risks to your overseas operations.

Business Continuity, Crisis Management, Security and Risk Management executives can each benefit from the unique approach GeoCritical takes to analyzing terror-related attacks. The GTIS is a customized product tailored specifically toward each client's individual requirements based on their geographic footprint, and populated with current, comprehensive terror attack data. This approach provides decision makers with specific actionable intelligence in a dynamic environment.

GTIS adapts to the client's specific business or supply chain model and visualizes terrorism risks at country, state/province, or even city level. GTIS analysis of your organization's operations can be measured and visualized in terms of attack frequency and target typology, impact on victims, and per capita trends. GeoCritical also offers the flexibility to consider, visualize and prioritize additional corporate data such as asset value of each facility, employee population, and the suppliers' criticality, credit score or key component contribution value.

“As criminologists know, the best predictor of future events is past events. The best predictor of terrorist attacks would therefore be past terrorist attacks. As suggested in the landmark legal case of Timberwalk v. Cain, the foreseeability of terrorist attacks is based on five factors: frequency, similarity, recency, proximity and publicity of past attacks. The probability of attack would increase exponentially based on these factors,” said Daniel B. Kennedy, Ph.D., CPP, Professor of Criminal Justice and Security Administration, University of Detroit Mercy.

Source : www.geocritical.com

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