Integrated Defense Test 1 Practice

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Describe the difference between physical access control and perimeter security and provide two example controls for each.

Physical access controls: badges and biometrics; perimeter security: fences and surveillance.

Controlling who can get into a space versus protecting the outer boundary of a site are two complementary layers of protection. Physical access controls manage entry at points where people actually gain access to a facility or a restricted area, using credentials like badges or biometric checks to verify that someone is authorized to enter. Perimeter security focuses on defending the facility’s outer edge, aiming to deter and detect attempts to breach the property before anyone gets close to interior doors, using barriers and observation systems.

So the best pairing is: physical access controls use credentials such as badges and biometrics to limit who can enter, while perimeter security uses fences and surveillance to secure the outside boundary and monitor for intrusions. These two together create defense in depth: the perimeter slows and signals potential attacks, and the interior access controls enforce authorization once someone is inside.

Some options blur these distinctions, such as placing ID checks at doors (which are typically interior access controls) or choosing surveillance as a primary interior measure, rather than as part of the outer boundary. The combination in this answer aligns with how each layer functions in practice.

Physical access control restricts entry to personnel; perimeter security protects the external boundary.

Physical access controls include CCTV cameras and motion sensors; perimeter security includes ID checks at doors.

Physical access controls and perimeter security are the same thing.

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