Certificate of Advanced Study in Security Studies
This concentration recognizes graduate students who have sought to prepare themselves as professionals in the expanding fields of national security and counterterrorism. A certificate recognizing this accomplishment is available to graduate students, in good standing, who have taken a concentration of courses during their graduate degree program at Syracuse University.
Obtaining the Certificate
This certificate is available only to those who are matriculated graduate students at Syracuse University. Students interested in obtaining the Certificate in Security Studies should consult the list of required and elective courses and other credit-bearing activities. Application for the Certificate should be made by first consulting with the student’s Faculty Advisor who will determine whether the student can pursue the Certificate consistent with the requirements of his/her degree program and then to the Director of the Certificate Program, Professor William Banks.
Two forms must be filled out and delivered to the Institute for National Security and Counterterrorism to complete this application stage (click here for application procedure):
(a) the Graduate School Internal Admission Application form for graduate school processing.
(b) the Proposed Program of Study which will be held by INSCT until all the requirements for the certificate are complete, and
A Graduate Diploma Request Form must be completed through MySlice during the semester you will graduate. A separate form must be completed for the graduate degree diploma through each home school or department.
The Director will recommend granting the Certificate to students who have met all of the requirements and who are in good standing in their graduate school or department.
Program Requirements
Twelve credits in four courses must be earned to be eligible for the certificate, six from the required courses and six from the electives listed below. Please note that elective courses change each semester, check MySlice for most up to date information about electives.
>> For a list of certificate courses offered for spring 2010, click here.
Required Courses
Two of the following courses:
Comparative
Civil-Military Relations (PSC 785)
Homeland Security: Federal Policy
and Implementation Challenges (PPA 730-2)
International
Security (PPA 704)
National Security
Law (LAW 700)
U.S. National
Security and Foreign Policy (PPA 706, PSC 706)
Homeland Security: Federal Policy
and Implementation Challenges (PPA 730-2)
Homeland Security: Federal Policy (PPA 700)
Elective Courses
Two of the following courses:
Communications, Crises, & Leadership
Comparative Civil-Military Relations (PSC 785)
Comparative Foreign Policy (PSC 783)
Congress and National Security (PPA 730)
Counter Terrorism
and the Law (LAW 790)
Crisis Management
(PSC 700)
Culture in World Affairs (ANT
707, IRP 707)
Defense Challenges for the 21st
Century (IRP 715) (taught in Washington, D.C.)
Democracy and Terrorism in
Southeast Asia (IRP 700)
Democracy in the
Middle East (PSC 690)
EU & US vs. Non-State Threats (PSC
700)
European
Peacemaking (IRP 635, HST 635) (in London and Syracuse)
Fundamentals of Conflict Studies
(PPA 601, IRP 601, SOS 601)
History of International
Relations (HST 645, IRP 645)
Homeland Security: Federal Policy
& Implementation Challenges (PPA 730)
Homeland Security: State and
Local Government Preparedness and Response (PPA 730)
Homeland Security (IST 600)
Humanitarian Action: Challenges,
Responses and Results (PPA
765)
International Conflict & Peace (PSC
754)
International Human Rights (LAW
778)
International Law and
Organizations (PSC 752)
International Negotiation (PSC
760)
International Relations of the
Middle East (PSC 600/IRP 600)
International
Security (PPA 704)
International Security Theory (PSC
700)
International
Security and the Asymmetric Use of Force (PPA 730, PSC 700)
Israel and Palestine: Historical
Approaches (HST 644)
Israeli-Palestinian
Conflict (PSC 600)
Law of Armed Conflict (Law 840)
Middle East Anthropology (ANT
668)
Multilateral
Peacekeeping (IRP 701, ANT 701) (in NYC and Syracuse)
National Security Challenges in a
New Century: Strategy, Policy, Resources (IRP 715)
National Security
and Counterterrorism Research Center (LAW 822)
Negotiation in
International Conflict (IRP 715, PPA 715) (in Washington, D.C.)
Non-State Actors in World Affairs
(PSC 757)
Non-Traditional
Challenges to Global Security (IRP 715, PPA 715) (in Washington,
D.C.)
Obstacles to Democracy in the
Muslim World (IRP 700)
Perspectives on
Terrorism (LAW 790 meets with PSC 700, HST 600, NEW 500)
Political Leadership (PSC 700)
Post-Conflict Reconstruction (PPA
715) (taught in Washington, D.C.)
Proliferation Issues (IRP 715)
(in Washington, D.C.)
Prosecuting Terrorists in Article
III Courts (LAW 779)
Radicalism in the Greater Middle
East (IRP 700)
Responding to Proliferation of
WMD's (PPA 705)
Seminar in
Communications, Crises, and Leadership (COM 600)
Seminar in
Resource Management (BUA 600)
Social Theory & the Middle East (PSC
682)
Strengthening Inter-Agency
Coordination (PPA
715) (in Washington, D.C.)
The Modern Presidency (HST 615)
The Role of
Non-State Actors and States in Combating the Threat of Global
Terrorism (IRP 700)
Theories of International
Relations (IRP 651)
Transnational
Crimes, Drugs, & Terrorism (PSC 700)
UN Organizations: Managing for
Change (PPA 730)
Understanding Peacekeeping: Israel
and the UN (IRP 700)
US National Security & Foreign
Policy (PPA 706)
War and Society I (HST 715)
War and Society II (HST 715)
War and the Liberal Conscience (IRP
635)
World at War (HST 615)
Special research projects, independent studies, courses, or professional experience otherwise not listed above may qualify for elective credit subject to approval by Faculty Advisor and the Certificate Program Director.
The registration process for non-law students seeking to enroll in required or elective law courses is as follows. Non-law students need to complete two forms: a College of Law Student Petition which must be signed by the professor and a College of Law Non-Matriculated Law Student Application which must be signed by the College of Law Registrar. Both forms are available at the College of Law Registrar's office located in Room 444 at the College of Law. Once the student has completed these forms and gained approval from the professor and the registrar, the College of Law Registrar will register the student.
Questions may be directed to Marlene Diamond via e-mail at mhdiamon@law.syr.edu or 443-2284.
Page last modified: Wednesday, November 18, 2009
