Intelligence Analysis
Description
Meeting U.S. Government Demand
The Master of Science in Intelligence Analysis is designed to help meet U.S. government demand for more specialists in the area of intelligence analysis to assist in the tasks of homeland security in the face of threats from global terrorism.
Border City Location
As a major border city, one that has the highest volume of commercial traffic with a foreign country of any U.S. city, the Detroit-Windsor area is uniquely located to provide corporate, local law enforcement and national government opportunities, issues and situations relevant to intelligence analysis.
Forecasting Risk
The field of intelligence analysis uses "open intelligence" information to provide forecasts of risks and benefits to guide governmental, law enforcement and private industry decision making. These forecasts involve the use of available data and news sources to analyze crime patterns, security threats, possible terrorist targets and other relevant societal trends.
Intelligence analysis builds on traditional courses in the areas of criminal justice and security administration, where the topics of crime foreseeability, threat analysis, crime prevention through environmental design and offender behavior are central. The degree is a 33 credit-hour graduate program.
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Degree Requirements - Master of Science in Intelligence Analysis (33 credits)
Curriculum and Courses
The curriculum has the following five components:
- Methodological courses in research and crime mapping;
- Background courses in the nature of conflict and terrorism;
- Courses in interviewing and threat assessment;
- A specialized concentration (in either profiling, physical and personnel security or policy analysis); and
- A thesis or capstone project in which the student applies what has been learned in the program to the analysis of a problem of their choosing.
Master of Science in Intelligence Analysis (33 credits)
Required Courses (21 credits)
- INT 5000* Research Methods in Intelligence (3 credits)
- INT 5010 Spatial Analysis and Mapping (3 credits)
- INT 5020 Terrorism: Theory and Practice (3 credits)
- INT 5030 Homeland Security and Threat Assessment (3 credits)
- INT 5040 Roots of 21st Century Conflict (3 credits)
- INT 5050 Intelligence Acquisition (3 credits)
- INT 5980* Capstone In Intelligence Analysis (3 credits)
Required Elective (Must choose one as an area of focus) (3 credits)
- INT 5100 Policy Analysis and Strategy Creation (Federal Enforcement) (3 credits)
- INT 5110 Intelligence for Private Security: Critical Infrastructure Protection (3 credits)
- INT 5120 Profiling and Behavioral Forecasting (Crime Analysis) (3 credits)
- INT 5420 Leadership and Behavior in Organizational Intelligence (3 credits)
- INT 5770 Intelligence Led Policing (3 credits)
Recommended Electives - choose two courses (6 credits)
- CJS 5520 Transnational Criminal Networks (3 credits)
- INT 5190 Literature and Crime (3 credits)
- INT 5200 Data Mining and Reporting in Intelligence (3 credits)
- INT 5420 Leadership and Behavior in Organizational Intelligence (3 credits)
- INT 5500 Topics in Intelligence (3 credits)
- INT 5550 Contemporary Issues in Intelligence Analysis (3 credits)
- SEC 5990 Seminar in Security Issues (3 credits)
Additional Elective (3 credits)
*Project
A capstone project is required for degree completion. The project begins with INT 5000 Research Methods in Intelligence and concludes with INT 5980 Capstone In Intelligence Analysis, which is taken in your final semester. Your project MUST be completed within one calendar year of your registration in INT 5980.
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Program Structure
The Master of Science in Intelligence Analysis is designed as a two-academic-year, four-semester program. To complete all coursework in two academic years, the student would either take three courses per semester (except two in the final semester) or take up to three courses during the summer semester(s) while taking two per semester during fall and winter.
The Master of Science in Intelligence Analysis is a 33 credit-hour program designed to train the student to gather information from a wide variety of sources, including:
- Open sources, such as published databases and newspapers and journals;
- And also through interviewing of various human assets;
- And to analyze that information and prepare reports and recommendations focusing on the implications and applications of that information to various security and crime control situations.
The program is designed as a rigorous sequence of courses that includes a basic core of required courses and a series of supporting elective courses. The six required courses expose the students to both fundamental and advanced concepts and analytical techniques related to intelligence and crime and threat-related information; the elective courses are designed to help the student prepare for more specific applications in the fields of:
- Law enforcement
- Geo-political conflict
- National security
- Private security (counter-terrorism)
- Competitive intelligence
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Outcomes
- The intelligence analysis courses have been designed to meet the knowledge, skills and abilities (K.S.A.s) that have been promulgated by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security for those involved in intelligence analysis.
- These K.S.A.s are also appropriate for police agency ("crime analyst") positions and analyst positions in private security.
- Besides maintaining satisfactory progress in various intelligence analysis courses, the student's capstone project (thesis) is the key element in his or her portfolio that demonstrates satisfactory acquisition of the relevant K.S.A.s.
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Why get a Master of Science in Intelligence Analysis at º£½Ç´óÉñ?
Mapping Lab
Students enrolled in the program will be afforded state-of-the-art learning resources, such as the Crime Mapping Software, available through the department's mapping lab, located within the Center of Cyber Security & Intelligence Studies.
Ethics
A key component of coursework in this program is an emphasis on the ethical issues involved in intelligence analysis. There are essentially two:
- What is the information being used for—is the organization that one is assisting (be it governmental or private) engaged in proper activity?
- Is the organization seeking information that can be gained through appropriate methods, and is it seeking an honest assessment of that information?
A professional degree in intelligence analysis is a critical step for ensuring that intelligence analysts understand the possible political misuse that an analysis can be applied to and thus that they recognize the larger societal constituency to whom they are also responsible.
Job Market
Given that both national agencies and global companies are seeking competent graduates to fill positions in this area, there is currently a lack of supply on both the national and local level. Currently, police departments and global companies must train their own personnel for intelligence analysis tasks.
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security has announced a grant program for students who want to develop skills that will prepare them for analyst jobs in that agency. There is currently a lack of such programs.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics predicts that employment of information security analysts is projected to grow 33 percent from 2020 to 2030, much faster than the average for all occupations. The demand for these analysts will be high as they will be needed to create innovative solutions to prevent hackers from stealing critical information or causing problems for computer networks.
Critical Need
The employment opportunities noted are driven by government's assessment of intelligence as a national "critical need" and by government funding. There are federal scholarship programs available to fund qualifying graduate students who desire to study and work in the intelligence area. Two of these programs are the Pat Roberts Intelligence Scholars Program (PRISP Program), which provides scholarships up to $25,000/year, and the Intelligence Community Scholarship Program, which awards scholarships to students to prepare them for civilian careers in the intelligence community.
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Admission Requirements
Applicants must have a bachelor’s degree from an accredited college and must have demonstrated intellectual competence for graduate study. Selection is based on such factors as previous academic record (expected 3.0 GPA) and/or relevant experience. Acceptance on a probationary status is allowed in some cases where academic standards are not fully met but competence has been indicated by the level of the applicant’s professional advancement.
Apply using Detroit Mercy's online portal at udmercy.edu/apply. That will create your account to which you can upload all of your application materials. If you need to mail your documents, please send them to:
Graduate Admissions Office
º£½Ç´óÉñ
4001 W. McNichols Road
Student Union, First Floor
Detroit, MI 48221-3038
admissions@udmercy.eduApplicants must:
- Submit all transcripts from previous schools
- Submit a statement of purpose
- Submit three letters of recommendation
- Submit a resume
- Interview with program faculty
Note: Applicants do not need to submit GRE scores as part of the application requirements. If scores are submitted, they will be reviewed as part of the admission review process.
Program Contact Information
Erick Barnes
Lecturer and Chair
Department of Criminal Justice
Briggs Building, Room 221
McNichols Campus
Telephone: 313-578-0363
Fax: 313-993-1166