Center for Homeland Defense and Security - Curriculum 692 (DL and Res)
Academic Associate
Carolyn C. Halladay, Ph.D.
Code 38, Glasgow Hall, Room 396
(831) 656-6256, DSN 756-6256, FAX (831) 656-1826
cchallad@nps.edu
Interim Director
Judith H. Stiles
Code 06, Watkins, Hall, Room 378
(831) 656-3155, DSN 756-3155, FAX (831) 656-2575
jhstiles@nps.edu
This 18-month program is offered at no cost to eligible senior and fast-track local, state, tribal and federal officials and NORTHCOM-sponsored officers with significant homeland security responsibilities. Participants: U.S. students only.
Overview
Designed to accommodate busy officials, the Master of Arts degree program requires participants to be in residence (at the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, California or at an educational facility in the National Capital Region [NCR]) two weeks each quarter (for a total of 12 weeks). Participants complete the remainder of their coursework via network-based distance learning methods. The curriculum and research are focused on current policy, strategy and organizational design challenges. Participants complete research papers and a thesis on policy development issues confronting their city, state, or sponsoring organization.
The program graduated its first class in June 2004 and graduates approximately 30 officials three times a year. A military variant of the program, including classified courses, is available through the Department of National Security Affairs.
Requirements for Entry
Applicants eligible for sponsorship must be full-time state, local, tribal or federal DHS officials or U.S. Navy and Marine Corps officers. All others, including other military branches and NORTHCOM, are eligible to apply but must obtain financial sponsorship from their command. A baccalaureate degree or its equivalent is required. A minimum grade point average of 3.0 or its equivalent is required. A complete application and eligibility details are available online at http://www.chds.us.
Convenes
This is an 18-month program with entry dates in spring and fall for Monterey cohorts; NCR cohorts start in the summer.
The program requires 12 weeks of in-residence attendance, with the balance of coursework conducted online.
Degree
Master of Arts in Security Studies (Homeland Defense and Security)
Typical Subspecialty Jobs (Executive Level)
Homeland Security
Emergency Management
Public Health
Public Safety (Law, Fire Enforcement)
Public Policy
Subspecialty Code
Navy P-Code: 2600P
Website: www.chds.us
Outcomes
A CHDS master’s program graduate will be able to:
- Serve and lead in public sector organizations with insight, ethics, and an awareness of the cultural, political, legal, fiscal, technological, and strategic context for the purpose of advancing the homeland security enterprise.
- Make informed contributions to procedural discussions and policy development efforts at various levels of government in support of U.S. and allied homeland security missions, objectives, and goals.
- Use a variety of analytical frameworks to assess and deploy human capital and material resources to meet current and emerging homeland security threats, challenges, and opportunities.
- Conduct research and create timely and relevant work, to include papers, theses, presentations, and analyses on homeland security topics.
Required Course of Study
Quarter 1
NS3180 | Introduction to Homeland Security | | 4 | 0 |
NS3210 | Threats and Political Social Psychology in Homeland Security | | 4 | 0 |
Quarter 2
NS4156 | Intelligence for Homeland Security: Organizational and Policy Challenges | | 4 | 0 |
NS3014 | Graduate School Skills | | 2 | 0 |
NS4081 | Research and Thesis Development for Homeland Security Professionals | | 4 | 0 |
Quarter 3
CS3660 | Critical Infrastructure Protection | | 4 | 0 |
NS4757 | Media and Communications for Homeland Security Professionals | | 4 | 0 |
Quarter 4
NS4755 | Strategy and Innovation for Homeland Defense and Security Professionals | | 4 | 0 |
NS4237 | Building Agency Capability in the Homeland Security Enterprise | | 4 | 0 |
Quarter 5
NS4881 | Multi-Discipline Approaches to Homeland Security | | 4 | 0 |
NS4238 | Policy and Leadership Issues in Homeland Security | | 4 | 0 |
NS0810 | Thesis Research | | 0 | 8 |
Quarter 6
NS4232 | Knowledge into Practice: A Homeland Security Capstone Course | | 3 | 0 |
NS0810 | Thesis Research | | 0 | 8 |
Educational Skill Requirements (ESRs)
Strategic Praxis: Students will build on their existing knowledge of—and experiences with—the homeland security enterprise (HSE) by critically examining HSE strategies and policies; analyzing the historical, political, economic, and legal factors that underpin homeland defense and security at all levels of government; and evaluating challenges, opportunities, and threats, both contemporary and future. Students will consider institutional roles and missions as they critically assess risks, consequences, and mitigation options for a wide range of homeland security challenges; create assessments to identify near-term and long-term threats; and effectively communicate their findings to support the creation of plans and policies for community resilience, including protection, preparedness, response, and recovery.
Enterprise Praxis: Drawing from an interdisciplinary range of methods, sources, ideas, and practice, students will apply creativity and critical thinking skills to analyze and evaluate the institutions that make up the homeland security enterprise by assessing the missions, capabilities, interests, equities, and limitations of components of the HSE. Students will identify and evaluate HSE objectives and stakeholders at every level of government and develop the capacity to advance interagency and inter-government collaboration. Students will also consider the role of capacity-building partnerships with external organizations, including non-government actors, to address homeland security and defense challenges under preparatory and crisis conditions.
Cultural Praxis: Students will consider how historical, political, social, and ethical factors can affect HSE practitioners’ ability to effectively respond to the needs of policymakers and the public. Students will assess how communities are formed, evolve, and may emerge as vulnerable or adversarial populations; assess institutional and interpersonal dynamics by evaluating the actions, motivations, and incentives of both HSE components and known and potential adversaries; consider models of interpersonal and bureaucratic leadership and followership that have applicability in departmental, interagency, and inter-government settings; and develop the skills to communicate effectively with diverse constituencies within and outside the HSE.
Analytical Praxis: Students will build on their existing research and writing skills as they learn and apply a portfolio of qualitative and quantitative research methods to ask critical questions about the HSE and examine options to address homeland defense and security challenges. Students will refine their abilities to identify, evaluate, and integrate source materials; assess and address their own analytical biases; effectively communicate with diverse audiences using a variety of media formats; and analyze how complexity and change define and shape the homeland defense and security discourse. Students will create knowledge that has academic and/or practical value, informing policy discussions and enriching the literature on homeland security.
Innovation Praxis: Students will develop innovative approaches to improving the effectiveness and efficiency of the homeland security enterprise by using a variety of methodologies to frame challenges and threats in new ways; understand different frames of reference, to include individual and organizational expectations, to assess the practicality and utility of new techniques and capabilities to implement HSE goals and objectives; and discover new methods for gathering and deploying data and information in support of HSE requirements. Students will study and assess new concepts and ideas – drawn from a range of disciplinary sources – in order to prompt informed discussions among homeland security and defense policymakers and professionals about strategy, policy, resource management, and operational constraints. Students will consider how historical, political, social, and ethical factors can affect HSE practitioners’ ability to effectively respond to the needs of policymakers and the public. Students will assess how communities are formed, evolve, and may emerge as vulnerable or adversarial populations; assess institutional and interpersonal dynamics by evaluating the actions, motivations, and incentives of both HSE components and known and potential adversaries; consider models of interpersonal and bureaucratic leadership and followership that have applicability in departmental, interagency, and inter-government settings; and develop the skills to communicate effectively with diverse constituencies within and outside the HSE.