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Graduate Certificate Requirements: Homeland Security

Homeland Security and Emergency Management

Graduate Certificate Requirements

The School of Professional Studies: Graduate, Online

The accelerated 7 week semester online Professional Studies graduate Homeland Security and Emergency Management program offers a Graduate Certificate that requires 12 credits (4 courses) including:

Graduate Courses: 12 credits (4 courses). 

All Certificates

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Transfer Credits: Our generous transfer policy allows students to transfer up to 90 credits required for a Bachelor degree, or up to 45 credits required for an Associate level degree as well as 6 credits of related graduate study. Credits presented for transfer must be from an accredited institution and a final course grade of a C or higher is required for undergraduate and a B or higher on the graduate level. Discuss with your advisor.

Prior Learning Assessments: Receive college credit for learning acquired through life experience. By evaluating a portfolio, we determine whether your experience qualifies as college level learning. Pay for one credit and receive three credits per course successfully challenged. You may challenge up to fifteen courses.

Credit by Examination: After enrolling in the School of Professional Studies, you may seek approval from your program to receive credit by examination. Contact your program's director or the Office of the Registrar for more information.

Transfer credit or credit by examination is acceptable in lieu of all Core Curriculum requirements except College Writing I (ENG-0160) and College Writing II (ENG-0170). These two courses are required of all students enrolled in the School of Professional Studies.

Homeland Security and Emergency Management

Embedded Graduate Certificate (12 Credits)

HLS 3100: Introduction to Homeland Security

Prerequisite: None

This course provides an overview of the essential ideas that constitute the emerging discipline of homeland security. The course's objectives are to expand students’ abilities to think critically, analyze, and communicate the central tenets of homeland security from a social justice perspective. Students will examine the evolution of terrorist movements, strategies to combat terrorism, crisis management, response to conventional and non-conventional threats, and the impact of heightened security and surveillance on individual rights and civil liberties.

Offered fall and spring semester. (3 Credits)

Choose 3 of the Following 7 Courses:

HLS 3028: Comparative Government for Homeland Security

Prerequisite: None

This course will provide students with the skills to learn from global best practices and successful tactics in combatting terrorism and apply those lessons to current threats in the United States. Students will learn to apply best practices within the scope of U.S. law while protecting individual human rights. Students will better understand the threats, policies, and strategies democratic countries use to cope with terrorism.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

HLS 3210: The Unconventional Threat to Homeland Security

Prerequisite: None

This course aims to provide an introduction to the operational and organizational dynamics of terrorism. Specific topics addressed in this course include terrorism by suicide, the role of the media, innovation and technology acquisition, the decline of terrorism, and methods of measuring the effect of counterterrorism policies, strategies, and sabotage. Emphasis on designing effective measures for countering and responding to terrorism based upon understanding organizational and operational dynamics in Homeland Security are integrated within the course to provide students with a real-world approach to unconventional thinking to counter unconventional threats.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

HLS 3660: Critical Infrastructure - Vulnerability Analysis and Protection

Prerequisite: None

This course analyses principles of critical infrastructure, in both the private and public sectors, vital to our community on a local, state, and federal level while demonstrating how critical infrastructure protection is one of the cornerstones of homeland security. This course evaluates risk reduction techniques to determine the optimal strategy for protection of each sector of critical infrastructure. This will include risk assessments for hard and soft targets that address risk mitigation plans and appropriate countermeasures in an all-hazards approach. Students will also apply vulnerability analysis techniques to critical infrastructure within their multi-jurisdictional region, and derive optimal strategies and draft policies for prevention of future terrorist attacks.

Offered fall semester. (3 Credits)

HLS 4133: The Psychology of Terrorism

Prerequisite: None

This course serves as an introduction for homeland security professionals to terrorism as a psychological phenomenon. Government agencies involved in homeland security need to understand the psychological consequences of mass-casualty terrorist attacks and other disasters. This course provides a broad overview of the psychological effects of terrorism, the status of and fallacies related to the interventions applied to victims of terrorism, and the generalized fear and anxiety experienced by the public at large. Current government strategies used to disseminate information to terrorist groups; psychological phenomena related to media coverage of terrorism; misconceptions and inaccuracies about the socio-political and religious motivations of terrorist groups; “profiling” and the typical psychological and cultural makeup of modern terrorists; and the social and cultural psychology of public conceptions of terrorists and acts of terror will be examined.

Offered spring semester. (3 Credits)

HLS 4156: Intelligence for Homeland Security

Prerequisite: None

This course examines key questions and issues facing the U.S. intelligence community and its role in homeland security and homeland defense, including terrorism, emergency management, and cyber security. Intelligence community operations at the state and local levels, with federal cooperation through the Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004 are examined. This will afford students the opportunity to address, analyze, and critique policy, oversight, intelligence support, organizational protection of civil liberties and substantive issues regarding homeland defense/security and national decision-making.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

HLS 4239: Human Rights and Social Justice in the Age of Terrorism

Prerequisite: None

This course is designed to highlight important topics pertinent to the protection of human rights during a time of national security concerns. Protecting individual rights is an inseparable part of a democratic society, the rule of law and a government dedicated to the advancement of the common good. The aim of this course is to create a clear understanding among students how respect for human rights can positively impact human security and promote civil societies.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

HLS 4881: Multidisciplinary Approaches to Homeland Security

Prerequisite: None

The purpose of this course is to provide students with insight into the structural, conceptual, intellectual foundations and implications of a multi-disciplinary approach to homeland security. Students will examine how the perceptions of homeland security varies among professionals in the field, the general public and differing ethnic, racial, religious and socio-economic groups.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

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Graduate Certificates

Set yourself apart by adding a graduate certificate to your master's degree. Students enrolled in graduate professional studies programs may choose from a diverse selection of graduate certificates to further enrich their educational experience. The graduate certificates may be taken as a stand alone option or, in some cases, achieved with additional courses embedded within the course of study. This additional focus provides specialized knowledge and experience tailored to your career and personal goals.

At Rosemont, we offer a high quality education and a pathway to success that provides exceptional value within a challenging yet supportive environment. Recognizing the demands faced by adult learners, we offer flexible degree options designed to support your continued growth through education.