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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – A team of researchers at The University
of Alabama are planning to study the use of media messages during
emergencies, as part of the Center for the Study of High Consequence
Event Preparedness and Response funded by a $15 million, three-year
grant from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.
This center will utilize a consortium of universities to study
preparation for disasters – high consequence events – with
special emphasis on acts of terrorism, addressing the technical,
systemic, behavioral and organizational challenges. Through its
Centers of Excellence program, Homeland Security is investing in
university-based partnerships to develop centers of multi-disciplinary
research where important fields of inquiry can be analyzed and
best practices developed, debated and shared.
Dr. William Evans, director of UA’s Institute for Communication
and Information Research, will lead the UA research.
“When terrorists strike, people turn on their televisions,
hoping to be informed about what is happening and whether or not
they are in danger,” Evans said. “Our group will be
working to understand how people use media during high consequence
events. We’ll also work to improve journalists’ preparedness
to cover high consequence events.”
The consortium is being led by Johns Hopkins University, where
Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff recently announced
the center development. Several universities in Alabama will be
involved, with the University of Alabama at Birmingham coordinating.
UA has worked with UAB on media research funded primarily by the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, studying journalists’ preparedness
to cover threats to public health such as bioterrorism and emerging
infectious diseases.
“We’ll help homeland security agencies and journalists
become better prepared to disseminate crucial information during
emergencies and disasters,” Evans said.
“This center will help us understand how we can minimize
the likelihood of high consequence events and what we need to do
to respond most effectively when high consequence events occur.”
The Center for the Study of High Consequence Event Preparedness
and Response will be a component of the Science and Technology
Directorate’s Centers of Excellence Program – a networked,
integrated, university-based system that contributes to the department’s
mission to secure the United States against terrorism through research
and education.
A high consequence event is any event that would kill or injure
many people or severely disrupt a community. DHS is interested
in high-consequence terrorism because of its unfamiliarity to both
specialists and the general public. The sparse historical record
and the impossibility of realistic full-scale experiment make research
into high-consequence terrorist acts vitally important.
UA’s Institute for Communication and Information Research,
known as ICIR, is among the most advanced facilities for communication
and information research in the nation. Founded in 1990, the ICIR
works with faculty, doctoral students and staff on research funded
by government agencies and media organizations. The ICIR features
a wide range of equipment and facilities specifically designed
to support media research, including a survey research laboratory,
a content analysis laboratory, focus group facilities, an audience
response theater and physiological data collection capacities.
The ICIR is the home of the peer-reviewed journals Media Psychology
and Journal of Entertainment Theory and Research. The latter is
scheduled to begin publication in 2006.
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