Purdue Homeland Security Institute

The Purdue Homeland Security Institute (PHSI) at Purdue University was created in 2002 in response to the September 11 attacks, with the mission to help the United States prevent, protect, respond and recover from any threat or action taken against it.[1] The PHSI has initiated partnerships with other universities, local and state agencies, and businesses. Dennis Engi, professor and head of industrial engineering, directed the PHSI in its formative stages. The current director, J. Eric Dietz,[2] is responsible for the Institute developing responses to threats in Indiana, nationally and internationally.[3]

Sources and notes

  1. "Purdue Homeland Security Institute". Purdue Homeland Security Institute. Retrieved December 15, 2018.
  2. "Purdue Homeland Security Institute - Faculty Directory". Purdue University. Retrieved December 15, 2018.
  3. Lillich, Mike (November 5, 2003). "Purdue's Homeland Security Institute to develop 'critical resources'". Purdue University. Retrieved December 15, 2018.
gollark: It really would be easier to just say "passwords do not match".
gollark: ... why the error codes?
gollark: > Now, question is: If you perform multiple quantum bogosorts in a row and your universe exists still, does that prove the existance of multiple universes?<@236628809158230018> No, anthropic principle, if your universe is unexisted you just won't see the results.
gollark: Bees.
gollark: The advantage of market systems and other decentralized stuff is that they can allocate resources reasonably well without having centralization, which has issues like computing power and not really being able to consider people's individual wants well.


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