The U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Science and Technology Directorate (S&T) has selected the of Arizona State University (ASU) to lead a consortium of U.S. academic institutions and other partners for a new Center of Excellence for Accelerating Operational Efficiency (CAOE).
S&T will provide CAOE with a $3.85 million grant for its first operating year in a 10-year grant period.
“By applying advanced analytical tools, this new Center will support real-time decision making that enables the Department’s operational components and other security practitioners to achieve improvements in operational efficiency,” said Acting Under Secretary for Science and Technology William N. Bryan.
“This new Center will work to provide an extra edge to the personnel protecting our ports, border crossings, airports, waterways, transit systems and cyber infrastructure.”
“As lead institution, Arizona State University will spearhead a consortium of academic, industry, government, and laboratory partners throughout the country to develop advanced analytic tools and technologies,” said Dr. Matthew Clark, director of S&T’s Office of University Programs, which manages the DHS Centers of Excellence (COE) system as part of S&T’s Research and Development Partnerships Group.
“Based on our rigorous and extensive selection process, we believe Arizona State University will be a strong and enthusiastic partner with the Department’s operational agencies and the COE network.
CAOE’s quantitative analytics research portfolio will focus on four major theme areas: data analytics, operations research and systems analysis, economics, and homeland security risk analysis.
The Center will work closely with the DHS operational components to develop tools and technologies that could be expected to yield significant and measurable efficiency gains.
This Center’s research portfolio will also support DHS leadership for policy analysis.
“To continue to improve homeland security strategic planning, the Department must integrate technical analysis to understand issues arising in the dynamic threat environment and prioritize opportunities to address them,” said Susan Monarez, DHS Deputy Assistant Secretary for Strategy and Analysis in the Office of Policy.
“This new Center of Excellence will make a significant contribution to Departmental strategic planning and the cascading impacts on resource management, accountability, and oversight.”
In addition, the Center will provide education and training to extend analytical capabilities and diversity across the homeland security workforce, leveraging Arizona State University’s success in enrolling and graduating increasing numbers of minorities in the science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) disciplines.
The DHS COEs were established by the Homeland Security Act of 2002 to be a “…coordinated, university-based system to enhance the Nation’s homeland security.”
S&T’s COEs are a well-integrated network of researchers and educators focused on specific high-priority DHS challenges.
The COEs work directly with the Department’s operational agencies to solve complex and difficult problems across the homeland security enterprise.
Each COE is led by a U.S. college or university and involves multiple partners for varying lengths of time.
COE partners include other academic institutions, industry, DHS Operational agencies, Department of Energy National Laboratories and other Federally-Funded Research and Development Centers, as well as other federal agencies that have homeland security-relevant missions, state/local/tribal governments, non-profits, and first responder organizations.
This is one of two new DHS S&T Center of Excellence awards.
DHS S&T recently selected George Mason University in Fairfax, Va. to lead a consortium of U.S. academic institutions and other partners for a new Center of Excellence (COE) in Criminal Investigations and Network Analysis (CINA). S&T will provide CINA with a $3.85 million grant for its first operating year in a 10-year grant period.
“We need to ensure that the nation’s law enforcement entities have the most sophisticated tools to counter transnational criminal networks, cross-border criminal activities, and criminal exploitation of the cyber domain,” said Bryan.
“This new Center’s objective is to provide law enforcement agents, officers and investigators with those tools in the form of novel technologies and strategies.
As lead institution, George Mason University will spearhead a consortium of academic, industry, government, and laboratory partners throughout the country and will work closely with U.S. Immigrations and Customs Enforcement and other law enforcement organizations to establish a long-term productive relationship.
“This is the first time we’ve selected George Mason as a lead institution,” said Dr. Matthew Clark, director of S&T’s Office of University Programs, which manages the DHS Centers of Excellence system within S&T’s Research and Development Partnerships Group.
“Their experience working with the security and intelligence communities, coupled with strong criminology and sociology programs, make them a strong partner for the Department.”
The Center’s research will focus on criminal network analysis, dynamic patterns of criminal activity, forensics, and criminal investigative processes.
CINA will work with DHS components and other federal, state, and local law enforcement agencies to develop strategies and solutions for on-the-ground use by agents and officers to predict, thwart, and prosecute crimes.
CINA will also contribute to the education and development of both university students and professionals working in the realms of prevention, prediction, investigation and prosecution.
“By partnering with George Mason University and other institutions, our agents will be able to work with cutting-edge tools and research that will shape how we combat the growing threat of transnational crime,” said Derek N. Benner, acting executive associate director for Homeland Security Investigations, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
The CAOE and CINA are the first 10-year awards issued for COEs.
For more information about OUP and the COEs, please visit www.dhs.gov/st-oup.