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Virginia Commonwealth University Offers BA Degree in Homeland
Security and Emergency Preparedness
RICHMOND, Va. (May 10, 2005) – Virginia Commonwealth University
has received state approval for a Bachelor of Arts degree in homeland
security and emergency preparedness, making it the first major research
university in the country to offer such a program.
The State Council of Higher Education for Virginia today approved the
undergraduate degree program, which was developed by faculty in VCU’s
L. Douglas Wilder School of Government and Public Affairs with assistance
from several federal and state agencies, including the U.S. Department
of Homeland Security, the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Virginia
Department of Emergency Management.
The program is designed to teach students theoretical and practical knowledge
and skills in preparing for natural disasters, critical system failures
and terrorist attacks.
“Government officials told us that an academic background in these
areas is absolutely necessary if the theory and practice of homeland security
is to develop in a mature direction,” said Robert D. Holsworth,
Ph.D., director of the VCU Wilder School. “The new major gives VCU
students a significant new career option and will provide government agencies
and companies involved in homeland security and emergency preparedness
with the type of employees they want to hire.”
Students with a bachelor of arts degree in homeland security will be able
to pursue government jobs at the local, state and federal level in homeland
security and emergency preparedness, law enforcement and intelligence.
They also will be prepared for employment with for-profit and nonprofit
consultants and research organizations, as well as private sector employment
with businesses that require emergency planning to protect critical infrastructure.
“The events of 9-11 sent a very clear signal to our nation, and
in order to meet the enduring challenges of the threat of terrorism to
the United States, we must build a national level of awareness and response
that allows us to maintain our way of life,” said William H. Parrish,
associate professor and former U.S. Department of Homeland Security senior
official, who will head the undergraduate homeland security degree program.
Parrish said that VCU’s program will play a major role in achieving
a national-level response through a rigorous academic environment and
internship programs that expose students to the practical and operational
sides of homeland security issues.
The undergraduate degree program will cover a broad range of topics related
to homeland security and emergency preparedness, including counter-terrorism,
public budgeting and legal and constitutional questions. Students will
learn advanced methods of assessing risk and will develop analytical and
research skills. They also will evaluate scholarly literature and government
emergency preparedness policies.
“Homeland security may be the most challenging and most critical
public policy issue of our era, similar in importance to the challenge
of dealing with nuclear weapons in the post-World War II world,”
said William Newmann, Ph.D., associate professor and expert on national
and international security and terrorism, who will serve as a faculty
member in the new degree program.
“Merging the policy and academic perspectives within a university
setting is the unique contribution of VCU’s program,” Newmann
said. “We believe this approach will ultimately help the nation
design policies that defend the United States without disrupting our way
of life.”
According the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, VCU will be the first
major research institution to establish a degree program in homeland security
and emergency preparedness.
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