User:Mrfisk/Consortium for Strategic Communication

History
The Consortium for Strategic Communication(CSC) is an initiative of the Hugh Downs School of Human Communication at Arizona State University. It was formed in 2005 to apply communication research to combating terrorism, promoting national security, and engaging in public diplomacy worldwide. It is composed of interdisciplinary scholars at ASU and partner institutions who are interested in applying knowledge of human communication to issues of countering ideological support for terrorism (CIST), diplomacy and public diplomacy. The CSC offers undergraduate and graduate class, as well as, public lectures. COMOPS is the official journal of the Consortium for Strategic Communication (CSC) that provides nonpartisan commentary on current issues in terrorism/counter-terrorism, public diplomacy, and security from a human communication perspective. Each journal or blog post outlines a current issue of interest and analyzes the issue using principles from rhetoric, persuasion, organizational, political, and intercultural communication. The site is updated on a weekly basis in order to maintain its integrity of addressing current topics. Authors of this website are made up of faculty, graduate students of the CSC, and their invited guests.

Current Research
Recently, the Consortium of Strategic Communication received a two-year, renewable grant of $2.7 million grant from the Office of Naval Research for their project, “Identifying Terrorist Narratives and Counter-Narratives: Embedding Story Analysts in Expeditionary Units.”

In 2008, the Consortium of Strategic Communication received an $867,000 grant from the U. S. Department of Defense to study the relatively new phenomena of self-organizing systems and armies of the future.

People
Steven Corman is a professor at Arizona State University in the Hugh Downs School of Communication. He has an extensive background, receiving a PhD in Communication Theory from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 1988, an M.A. in Communication from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champiagn in 1984, and a B.S. in Communication from Illinois State University in 1981. He has mold many important positions in the academia world including Director for the Consortium for Strategic Communication at ASU, Professor, Associate professor, research assistant, just to name a few. Along with many works have being published, Dr. Corman has provided many services as well including Public, School, private and community. He is currently working on a project depicting and interpreting terrorist’s narratives and to understand the messages being relayed to the United Sates, further understand their motives and lifestyle. In 2009, he recieved the International Communication Award for Outstanding Applied or Public Research

Pauline Hope Cheong (Ph.D, University of Southern California) is a communications scholar in new media and culture. She is an Associate Professor at the Hugh Downs School of Human Communication at Arizona State University. Her research addresses empirical and policy questions of how we build community and social capital amidst an evolving global media landscape, particularly how minority groups access and appropriate media for social change and social cohesion. She has examined new media connections among religious and extremist groups, youths, and medically underserved populations, in North America and Asia. Her research has been published in multiple international and peer-reviewed journals including New Media and Society, Information, Communication and Society, Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication, Journal of Media and Religion, Health communication, Journal of Health Communication, Journal of International and Intercultural Communication and The Information Society. She is currently the Co-Principal Investigator (with Steve Corman, as Principal Investigator), of a grant from the Office of Naval Research of $2,588,162 (2009-2012) “Identifying Terrorist Narratives and Counter-Narratives: Embedding Story Analysts in Expeditionary Units. She is a recipient of various research awards, including the joint visiting Post-Doctoral fellowship award by Social Science Research Council, U.S., and the Economic and Social Research Council, U.K. and Top Research Paper awards at the annual International Communication Association Conferences.

H. L. (Bud) Goodall, Jr. is professor of communication in the Hugh Downs School of Human Communication at Arizona State University. Dr. Goodall received his Ph.D. in 1980 from Penn State University, obtained a B.A. in Language Arts from Shepherd University in 1973; a M.A. in Speech Communication from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1974. A pioneer in the field of narrative ethnography, he introduced the detective figure of speech to revise high technology organizations and cultures in Casing a Promised Land (1989). He also toured and played rhythm guitar in the Whitedog band, investigating rock and roll as a social theory of everyday working life in Living in the Rock n Roll Mystery (1991). He also went undercover to discover alternative forms of religion and spirituality in the southern region of the United States in Divine Signs: Connecting Spirit to Community (1996). He coauthored of Organizational Communication: Balancing Creativity and Constraint, 6th ed. (Bedford/St. Martins, 2009), and he authored the highly acclaimed Writing the New Ethnography (AltaMira Press, 2000). His memoir, A Need to Know: The Clandestine History of a CIA Family (Left Coast Press, 2006), won the Best Book of 2007 award from the Ethnography Division of the National Communication Association. In 2003 the National Communication Association gave him the Gerald M. Phillips Award for Distinguished Applied Communication Scholarship. His most recent work is in applying theories of communication and narratives to the challenge of countering ideological support for terrorism. During this time, he has served as a U.S. Department of State International Speaker and has produced an edited volume, with Steve Corman and Angela Trethewey, Weapons of Mass Persuasion: Strategic Communication and the War of Ideas (Peter Lang, 2008). He is currently the Co-Principal Investigator (with Steve Corman, as Principal Investigator), of a grant from the Office of Naval Research of $2,588,162 (2009-2012) “Identifying Terrorist Narratives and Counter-Narratives: Embedding Story Analysts in Expeditionary Units.

Angela Trethewey is Director of the Hugh Downs School of Human Communication at Arizona State University, and is a member of the Consortium for Strategic Communication. She received her Ph.D. in Organizational Communication from Purdue University. Her scholarship centers on issues of ideology and power as they impact strategic communication processes. She is currently working on a Department of Defense sponsored project on self-organizing systems and armies of the future. She is co-author of the best-selling book Organizational Communication: Balancing Creativity and Constraint, 5th ed.

Chris Lundry is a postdoctoral fellow in the Arizona State University Hugh Downs School of Communications Consortium for Strategic Communication, where he is the group's Southeast Asia specialist. He completed his doctorate in Political Science (Comparative Politics) in May 2009. His dissertation focused on nationalism, state cohesion, and separatism in eastern Indonesia, and was supported by Fulbright, Blakemore Freeman, and ASU Dissertation Completion fellowships. He is fluent in Indonesian, and has worked as a United Nations accredited observer in the 1999 East Timor referendum, a Carter Center observer in the 2004 Indonesian presidential election, and with several NGOs in East Timor and the United States. At ASU, he has taught courses through the Program for Southeast Asian Studies and the departments of Political Science, History, Global Studies and Interdisciplinary Studies.

Jeffry Halverson is an Islamic studies scholar and Postdoctoral Fellow at Arizona State University. He graduated from Nazareth College with honors in 2000 and studied Islam in Cairo, Egypt, as a Fulbright scholar from 2000-2001. He received his Master's Degree in 2004 and Ph.D. in 2008 in Islamic Studies from the Department of Religious Studies at Arizona State University. Dr. Halverson's research focuses on Sunni political theology, the Muslim Brotherhood, and Islamic liberalism. He is the author of the forthcoming book Theology and Creed in Sunni Islam from Palgrave Macmillan

 Scott W. Ruston is a Postdoctoral Research Associate at the CSC.

Media
On September 14, 2009 Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Admiral Michael Mullen, answered the Consortium's question they posted on Youtube about how scientists can better assist the military.

Selected Publications
Trethewey, A., Corman, S. R., & Goodall, H. L. (2009). Out of their heads and into their conversations: Countering extremist ideology. http://www.comops.org/article/123.pdf

Lukens-Bull, R. & Woodward, M. (2009). Israeli nukes versus Palistinian slingshots. http://www.comops.org/article/122.pdf

Corman, S. R. & Dooley, K. J. (2008). Strategic communication on a rugged landscape: Principles for finding the right message. http://www.comops.org/article/121.pdf

Hess, A. & Justus, Z. S. (2007). (Re)defining the long war: Toward a new vocabulary of international terrorism. http://www.comops.org/article/112.pdf

Woodward, M. (2007). Islam, pluralism and democracy. http://www.comops.org/article/113.pdf

Corman, S. R., Trethewey, A., & Goodall, H. L. (2007). A 21st century model for communication in the global war of ideas. http://www.comops.org/article/114.pdf

Justus, Z. S. & Hess, A. (2006). One Message for many audiences: Framing the death of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi. http://www.comops.org/article/115.pdf

Goodall, H. L., Trethewey, A., & McDonald, K. (2006). Strategic ambiguity, communication, and public diplomacy in an uncertain world: Principles and practices. http://www.comops.org/article/116.pdf

Corman, S. R., Hess, A., Justus, Z. S. (2006). Credibility on the war on terrorism. http://www.comops.org/article/117.pdf