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UB professor joins Homeland Security initiative addressing Arctic security

waterway in the Arctic.

UB management professor Kyle Hunt has joined a U.S. Department of Homeland Security initiative that will address critical security issues in the Arctic.

By ALEXANDRA RICHTER

Published February 5, 2024

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Kyle Hunt.
“This initiative will leverage the expertise within the nation’s colleges and universities to help meet homeland security needs in the complex and evolving Arctic domain. ”
Kyle Hunt, assistant professor
Department of Management Science and Systems

Kyle Hunt, assistant professor of management science and systems in the School of Management, was recently selected to be part of a new Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Science and Technology Directorate initiative that will address critical security issues in the Arctic.

Through the ADAC-ARCTIC Center of Excellence, a consortium of academic, industry, government, laboratory, and local and indigenous community partners will provide access to rigorous research and education resources for DHS and broader homeland security stakeholders.

“With the changing ecosystem in the Arctic increasing risk to operational missions and the narrowest distance between mainland Alaska and mainland Russia only about 55 miles, this initiative will leverage the expertise within the nation’s colleges and universities to help meet homeland security needs in the complex and evolving Arctic domain,” Hunt explains.

His research project, titled “Assessing and Mitigating Risks in the Arctic: A Multi-Stakeholder Framework,” will use mathematical techniques to determine the best way for stakeholders to collaborate and share resources in an effort to secure the U.S. Arctic from natural disasters and foreign adversaries. The project has secured initial funding of $200,000 per year for two years.

Hunt will collaborate with the University of Alaska Anchorage and DHS agencies to build on his previous research that used game theory to tackle pressing security challenges.

“This project is a natural next step in my research using mathematics to model strategic interactions between those defending against threats and those perpetrating them,” says Hunt. “We will focus on developing new models to study contemporary threats in the Arctic and test these models in real-world scenarios.”

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security Science and Technology Directorate will provide ADAC-ARCTIC with $46 million over a 10-year cooperative agreement period, supporting a research portfolio developing multidisciplinary solutions focused on natural and man-made disasters, ice melt and communications infrastructure. The consortium will be led by the University of Alaska Anchorage.

UB undergraduate and graduate management students will join Hunt and collaborator Jun Zhuang, Morton C. Frank Professor of Industrial and Systems Engineering in the UB School of Engineering and Applied Sciences. Research is set to begin with a kickoff meeting this month with the Department of Homeland Security in Washington, D.C.