Mar 29, 2024  
2015 Graduate Catalog 1.2 (SUMMER - FALL) 
    
2015 Graduate Catalog 1.2 (SUMMER - FALL) [ARCHIVED CATALOG - Consult with Your Academic Advisor for Your Catalog Year]

Cyber Policy and Risk Analysis (M.P.S.)


The Master of Professional Studies (M.P.S) degree in Cyber Policy and Risk Analysis educates and prepares cybersecurity professionals and high-level decision makers in industry and government to understand the challenges of, and participate effectively in, the evolving domains of cyberspace and cybersecurity.  Students will learn how to deal legally and ethically with sensitive data and information entrusted to them in a variety of application domains and settings, and how to design and evaluate policy. Students will become familiar with the issues surrounding cyber espionage, including  the legal and policy limits on United States activity, the threat posed by strategic cyber espionage against the United States, and the tension between the competing demands of national security and personal privacy. In addition, students will examine how other countries are organizing for offensive and defensive activities in cyberspace. Emphasis is placed on those countries that could challenge the national security of the United States concluding with a look at cyber matters in the global diplomatic arena.

The M.P.S. program provides two specialization areas: 1) cyber policy and 2) cyber data fusion and analysis. The specialization in cyber policy provides an overview of the Constitutional, legal and public policy issues associated with the field of cybersecurity. Students will examine the gap existing where technology has outstripped legal, ethical, and policy disciplines. The specialization in cyber data fusion and analysis (cyber data analytics) provides an overview of variety of defensive and offensive modes of operation. Students will address areas of “big data” as well as how to gather, fuse, analyze, store, and responsibly deal with all manner of sensitive information.

The M.P.S. program was designed to address the issues raised in the President’s report titled Liberty and Security and Security in a Changing World, which details forty-six recommendations for protecting national security and foreign policy interests while continuing to value privacy, civil liberties, and public trust.