Z
Zoltán Székely
Researcher at National University of Public Service
Publications - 6
Citations - 53
Zoltán Székely is an academic researcher from National University of Public Service. The author has contributed to research in topics: Resilience (network) & Information privacy. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 6 publications receiving 34 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Quantitative resilience assessment in emergency response reveals how organizations trade efficiency for redundancy
TL;DR: This work develops for the first time fully quantitative and data-driven indicators for several aspects that relate to resilient organizational behavior during emergency situations that are directly linked to real-world networks, infrastructures, and the people acting within them.
Journal ArticleDOI
A comparison of primary stakeholders’ views on the deployment of biometric technologies in border management: Case study of SMart mobILity at the European land borders
TL;DR: A comparison of travelers' and border authorities' views on the deployment of biometric technologies in border management is provided to enable us to understand the concerns of travelers and border guards in order to facilitate the acceptance ofBiometric technologies for a secure and more convenient border crossing.
Analysis Of Existing Assessment Resilience Approaches, Indicators And Data Sources: Usability And Limitations Of Existing Indicators For Assessing, Predicting And Monitoring Critical Infastructure Resilience
Aleksandar Jovanović,Peter Klimek,Amrita Choudhary,Igor Linkov,Knut Øien,Nicolas Schmid,Maike Vollmer,Johan Sanne,S. L. Andersson,Zoltán Székely,Riitta Molarius,Thomas Knape,U. Barzelay,M. Stanišić,Gerald Walther,D. Lieberz +15 more
TL;DR: The research leading to these results has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme, under the Grant Agreement No 700621.
Book ChapterDOI
How to Do It Right: A Framework for Biometrics Supported Border Control
Mohamed Abomhara,Sule Yildirim Yayilgan,Anne Hilde Ruen Nymoen,Marina Shalaginova,Zoltán Székely,Ogerta Elezaj +5 more
TL;DR: This paper discusses various ethical, social and legal challenges arising due to the use of biometrics technology in border control and a framework is provided to meet the emergent need for supplying interoperability among multiple information systems used for border control.
Book ChapterDOI
Border Control and Use of Biometrics: Reasons Why the Right to Privacy Can Not Be Absolute
TL;DR: Why privacy cannot be absolute from different points of view is explained, including privacy versus national security, privacy properties conflicting with border risk analysis, and Privacy by Design (PbD) and engineering design challenges.