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ICC's Criminal Justice program benefits from MC grant

            Itawamba Community College’s Criminal Justice program will benefit from a $50,000 grant that has been awarded to Mississippi College to explore ways to help in the battle against global terrorism.

            The Mississippi Office of Homeland Security provided the funds to MC’s Project Arrowhead to proceed with the initiative.

As part of Project Arrowhead, Mississippi College’s professors and others will work with ICC starting in January in Fulton. Students from both schools will assist with the project.

“We are pleased to participate with Mississippi College by retaining and distributing State funding for Project Arrowhead,” said Charles Rowland, director of ICC’s Criminal Justice program. “ICC is examining any future possibilities of our students to participate in the Project Arrowhead study, along with Mississippi College students. This is a fantastic opportunity to further research into a specific area of terrorism which will hopefully produce some empirical results.”

            Based on the Clinton campus, Project Arrowhead researchers will learn what motivates young people in the United States to join terrorist groups like ISIS.

            According to MC professor of homeland security Godfrey Garner, The MC Project Arrowhead seeks to “prevent more young people in America from falling into a trap of Islamic jihadist recruitment.”

            Along with the MC professors, Rowland appreciates the support from the Mississippi Office of Homeland Security.

            Incidents of violence tied to extremist groups worldwide continue to rise, according to information from MC. The Global Terrorism Database reports more than 180,000 terrorist attacks around the world between 1970 and 2017. An estimated 80 percent of all terrorist-related deaths occur in Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Nigeria and Syria.

            Much of the initial grant will be used to conduct interviews. In addition, a Colorado-based counterterrorism/cyber expert has agreed to help professors Garner and Bill Blunden run Project Arrowhead, which was launched nearly three years ago.



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