Mission:
To harness the methods and resources of the social and behavioral sciences towards a better understanding of the formation and dynamics of terrorist groups and the social and psychological impacts of terrorist threats in order to aid the efforts to stop terrorist recruitment, disrupt terrorist organizations, and reduce the psychological and social impact of terrorist threats.
USC's Role
  • Develop standardized protocols and metadata for georeferencing all START databases.
  • Integration of spatial social science throughout the research program (use technologies such as GIS, remote sensing, geographic visualization) to understand where and why (the why of the where).
  • Develop new ways of visualizing and displaying such data—an exciting new research field call geovisualization.
  • Help advance the emerging field of vulnerability science through improvements in the methods, models, and measurement of vulnerability (what makes people and places vulnerable to threats; how does their previous experience with natural hazards affect their resilience to human-induced threats such as terrorism); and how can we mitigate or lessen the impacts.
  • Engage a multi-disciplinary research team to focus on these problems.
  • Population Vulnerability Analysis, Spatial Social Science and GIS
    Shifting Terrorism Trends Across Time and Space
    Hazards and Vulnerability Research Institute
    Department of Geography
    University of South Carolina
    Columbia, South Carolina 29208
    Phone: 803.777.1699
    Fax: 803.777.4972
    email: scutter@sc.edu

    Page last updated: 31 October 2006
    © Hazards and Vulnerability Research Institute,
    University of South Carolina