University of Maryland News
UM to Lead Major U.S. Homeland Security Behavioral Research Center
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Gary LaFree, professor of
criminology, will direct the center. |
The University of Maryland will be home to a major U.S.-sponsored social
and behavioral research center dedicated to reducing worldwide
terrorism. Its research will focus on areas such as how to disrupt the
formation of terror networks and minimize the impact of future attacks.
U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security Tom Ridge and Charles
McQueary, his under secretary for science and technology, came to
College Park today and announced a $12-million, three-year grant to
Maryland and its academic partners to establish the Center of Excellence
for Behavioral and Social Research on Terrorism and Counter-Terrorism.
It will be the fourth university-based center of excellence funded by
the department.
"This is a major opportunity for us to help the
nation confront the threat of terrorism," says Jacques Gansler,
Maryland's vice president of research, who will oversee the work of the
center. "The expertise of social scientists can help disrupt terror
operations and reduce the after-effects of attacks. But so far the
nation hasn't taken full advantage of their knowledge. With this new
team, we hope to change that."
Maryland will direct the center,
building a research team with its five major partners and more than 10
other academic institutions in the United States and abroad. The
University of Colorado, University of Pennsylvania, Monterey Institute
of International Studies, University of South Carolina and the
University of California, Los Angeles are the major partners.
"This may be the social science equivalent of the Manhattan Project,"
says Gary LaFree, the University of Maryland criminologist who will
direct the new center of excellence. "Too often, policy-makers have had
to counter terrorists on the basis of assumptions and guesstimates. Our
job will be to give them more solid information to work with."
The new center of excellence will be built around teams of social
scientists drawn from many fields. "It's an unusual way to do social
research, but it fits the challenge," La Free says. "We know a lot more
about violence, group psychology and international conflict than has
been brought to bear on this problem. Our teams will be more inclusive
so we can tap this expertise."
Research Targets
In the
first year, one working group will study how terrorist organizations
form and recruit, focusing on specific organizations that pose a clear
and present danger. One line of research, for example, will ask whether
terror groups inspired by religious zeal are more likely to use weapons
of mass destruction than their secular counterparts. Another will look
at the way terror groups have exploited the 9-11 attacks to expand their base of popular support.
Yet another will examine U.S. prisons as recruiting grounds for terror
groups.
In all these studies, researchers will look for ways to
intervene and disrupt the process. "We'll be a kind of academic
rapid-response team," LaFree says. "Part of our job will involve getting
timely advice to homeland and national security professionals in
government."
A second working group will study the internal
dynamics of terror organizations looking for patterns of behavior or
other predictors of what groups may do next. A third team will study how
to warn of terror risks, prepare for attacks and limit the damage once
launched. "The strength of this center lies in the collaboration," says
Gansler. "Through teamwork the assets of each of the partners will be
amplified."
The researchers will draw on a variety of tools
including major global databases of ethnic struggles over the past 60
years and the most comprehensive open data set on terror incidents. As
part of his prior research, LaFree has been assembling the terror
database and will begin to mine it for clues about the roots of terror
and effective counter-measures.
The center will also have a
strong educational component, helping to train a new generation of
researchers in the field of terror-related social science.
Team
Leaders
Gary LaFree, professor of
criminology, University of
Maryland, is the principal investigator and will direct the center.
Arie Kruglanski,
professor of social psychology, University of Maryland, will direct a
team researching terrorist group formation and recruitment. He is also a
co-principal investigator.
Clark McCauley, professor of psychology, Bryn Mawr College and
co-director Solomon Asch Center for Study of Ethnopolitical Conflict,
University of Pennsylvania, will direct a team researching terrorist
group persistence and dynamics.
Kathleen
Tierney, professor of sociology and director of the Natural Hazards
Research and Applications Information Center, University of Colorado,
will direct a team researching societal aspects of terrorism.
Jonathan
Wilkenfeld, professor of political science and director of the Center
for International Development and Conflict Management, University of
Maryland, is a co-principal investigator.
Gary Ackerman, a
senior research associate at the Center for Nonproliferation Studies,
will be the lead investigator from the Monterey Institute of
International Studies.
Susan Cutter, a distinguished professor of geography and director of the
Hazards Research Lab, will be the lead investigator from the University
of South Carolina.
Linda
Bourque, a professor in the department of community health sciences and
associate director of the Center for Public Health and Disasters, will
be the lead investigator from the University of California, Los Angeles.
Maryland and Homeland Security
The University of Maryland is deeply involved in a variety of
technical, scientific and behavioral homeland security-related research.
In addition to individual projects, the university supports a number of
relevant research centers. For example, the UM Center for Advanced Study
of Language is a U.S. Department of
Defense-funded research effort designed to enhance foreign language
proficiency across the federal government. It also investigates the
impact of language and proficiency across the federal government. It also investigates the impact of language on culture and behavior.