U.S. Department of Homeland Security Centers of Excellence Capabilities Showcase
The 2021 Centers of Excellence Summit features an Capabilities Showcase with virtual exhibits where attendees can navigate through virtual booths of COE and vendor partners to share research breakthroughs, discuss new products and tools to assist operational decision-makers and attend demonstrations of dynamic solutions to secure our Homeland.
The COE network is an extended consortium of hundreds of universities conducting groundbreaking research to address homeland security challenges. Sponsored through the DHS Science and Technology Directorate (S&T) Office of University Programs (OUP), the COEs work closely with the homeland security community to develop customer-driven, innovative tools and technologies to solve real-world challenges.COE partners include academic institutions; industry; national laboratories; DHS operational components; S&T divisions; other federal agencies; state, local, tribal and territorial homeland security agencies; and first responders. These partners work in concert to develop critical technologies and analyses to secure the nation.
Current COEs
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- Borders, Trade, and Immigration Institute (BTI) – Led by the University of Houston, BTI develops technology-based tools, techniques, and educational programs for border management, immigration, trade facilitation, and targeting and enforcement of transnational borders.
- The Center for Accelerating Operational Efficiency (CAOE) – Led by Arizona State University, CAOE applies advanced analytical tools to optimize efficiency in homeland security operations.
- Center of Excellence for Awareness and Localization of Explosives-Related Threats (ALERT) – Led by Northeastern University, ALERT develops new means and methods to protect the nation from explosives-related threats.
- The Criminal Investigations and Network Analysis Center (CINA) – Led by George Mason University, CINA develops strategies and solutions to enhance criminal network analysis, forensics, and investigative processes for on-the-ground use by agents and officers to predict, thwart, and prosecute crimes
- Coastal Resilience Center of Excellence (CRC) – Led by the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, CRCconducts research and education to enhance the Nation’s ability to safeguard people, infrastructure, and economies from catastrophic coastal natural disasters such as floods and hurricanes.
- Critical Infrastructure Resilience Institute (CIRI) – Led by the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, CIRI conducts research and education to enhance the resilience of the Nation’s critical infrastructure and its owners and operators.
- The Center of Excellence for Cross-Border Threat Screening and Supply Chain Defense – Led by Texas A&M University, CBTS focuses on technologies detecting biological threats moving through global supply chains, data integration and analytics to support threat detection, and novel methods to minimize risks to DHS operations.
- Maritime Awareness Security Center (MASC) – Co – Led by the University of Alaska Anchorage and Stevens Institute of Technology, MASC develops technologies, products, and programs to enhance maritime security and resilience in dynamic marine environments.
- The new National Counterterrorism Innovation, Technology, and Education (NCITE) Center of Excellence – Led by the University of Nebraska at Omaha, NCITE will focus on developing solutions terrorism prevention and counterterrorism research to safeguard the nation’s people, infrastructure, and economy, including solutions that can help prevent terror attacks by countering the radicalization of people and their mobilization to violence.
- The new Master of Business Administration (MBA) program will focus on transitioning security technology from research and development phases to operational usage. The Security Technology Transition (STT) program will foster capabilities and skillsets needed to develop, acquire, implement, and manage transition processes of technologies through their lifecycle.
Emeritus COEs
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- National Center for Risk and Economic Analysis of Terrorism Events (CREATE) – Led by the University of Southern California, CREATE develops advanced tools to evaluate the risks, costs and consequences of terrorism.
- Center for Visualization and Data Analytics (CVADA) – Co-led by Purdue University (visualization sciences – VACCINE) and Rutgers University (data sciences – CCICADA), CVADA creates the scientific basis and enduring technologies needed to analyze large quantities of information to detect security threats to the nation.
- Food Protection and Defense Institute (FPDI) – Led by the University of Minnesota, FPDI defends the safety and security of the food system by conducting research to protect vulnerabilities in the food supply chain. FPDI was formerly named the National Center for Food Protection and Defense (NCFPD).
- Center of Excellence for Zoonotic and Animal Disease Defense (ZADD) – Co-led by Texas A&M University and Kansas State University, ZADD protects the nation’s agriculture and public health sectors against high-consequence foreign animal, emerging and zoonotic disease threats.
- Coastal Hazards Center of Excellence (CHC) – Co-led by the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and Jackson State University, CHC performs research and develops education programs to enhance the nation’s ability to safeguard populations, properties and economies from catastrophic natural disasters.
- National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism (START) – Led by the University of Maryland, START provides policy makers and practitioners with empirically grounded findings on the human elements of the terrorist threat and informs decisions on how to disrupt terrorists and terrorist groups.
For more information, visit https://www.dhs.gov/science-and-technology/centers-excellence