Master of Science

Intelligence and Security Studies Degree

Make the world more safe and secure in this flexible, streamlined program designed to build on your field knowledge.


Make the world more safe and secure in this flexible, streamlined program designed to build on your field knowledge.

Learn Online

Intelligence and Security Studies Degree

An online degree that hones your expertise in intelligence and national security.

For those looking to defend our nation from intelligence and security threats, Bellevue University offers a master’s in intelligence and security studies. In this completely online program, you will learn from experienced and professional faculty who will develop your academic research skills and transnational knowledge of global issues and regions of the world. The security studies program’s coursework will challenge you to develop knowledge of major geopolitical and military issues, principles, techniques, and policy.

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Simplified entry—no GRE or GMAT required.

Select a career-focused degree program without the cost and hassle of admissions tests. Our admissions team specializes in helping non-traditional students including those with military backgrounds. We are here to help you apply and enroll so you can get started quickly on the education you want.

Earn specialized certificates along with your master's in intelligence.

Defending what matters most requires specific, high-quality training from practitioners who know and study intelligence topics in the field. The intelligence and security studies program gives you the opportunity to build your electronic portfolio with the help of expert faculty. As you complete specific courses, you’ll earn several graduate Certificates of Completion:

  • Intelligence and Security Strategy
  • Strategic Intelligence
  • Strategic Deterrence
  • Regions, Geopolitics and Strategy, OR
  • Security Policy and Conflict

Customize your degree further with a specialization in either Comparative Politics or International Relations.

Take the next step in intelligence and security studies. We’re ready to help you get there.

Courses

What You’ll Learn

Graduates of the Master of Science in Intelligence and Security Studies program should be able to:

  • Apply intelligence analysis methodologies, theories, and techniques of national security to current threats in the global security sector.
  • Evaluate security policies to make informed, research-based recommendations in geopolitical and military issues contexts.
  • Distinguish and assess strategic problems within specific cultural, political, social, economic, and environmental contexts.
  • Create threat assessments, with open source data collection and analysis, on major geopolitical and military issues, threats, actors, and principles.
  • Create original intelligence assessments utilizing the intelligence cycle process.
  • Develop new original research for security and intelligence scholarship.

Intelligence and Security Studies Degree Courses

Current students please login to BRUIN and select “Academic Progress” for your curriculum requirements.

Requirements (36 credit hours)

(Click a course name below to view course details)

Core Requirements (27 credit hours)

This course examines the application of national security into the global arena and how complicated transnational threats represent unique dangers to American interests.

Examines in comparative perspective the intelligence communities of various important states around the globe, including both allies and adversaries of the U.S.

This course examines how and what happens when states fail, the challenges and debates surrounding rebuilding conflict-ridden states, the methods available to achieve such objectives, and the criticisms and opponents of peacekeeping. The course exposes students to aspects of military intervention, economic and political reconstruction, and diplomatic engagement in terms of establishing peaceful and stable societies.

This course examines an increasingly important aspect of 21st century conflict: green conflict, based on ecological, natural resource and demographic crises. It will assess how changing factors in the environment can alter and impact states and transnational relations. The geopolitics of energy and other natural resources will be a major emphasis of the course.

This course examines the underlying philosophy behind the most prominent terrorist groups at the international level and the controversies and contradictions entailed within said groups. Students will become aware of contrasting perspectives and the debates raging within political Islam, challenging the idea that it can be considered monolithic.

Examines the complexity of international political economy, its manipulation, misuse, and role in the elevation, continuation, and worsening of conflict around the globe.

This course examines the various and diverse forms, philosophies, and political arguments made around the globe for going against American policy and interest. It will analyze the different theoretical approaches used to study anti-Americanism and delve into the various international and domestic factors impacting the phenomenon.

This course examines deterrence in a comprehensive fashion, giving not only an historical grounding in the concept but also its evolution and likely transformation into the future as it applies to American interests.

This course examines what has become a key buzzword of 21st century security: cyber warfare and deterrence. The various forms and complexities of cyber war will be examined, including aspects of non-state actors, international law, financial flows, and state capabilities. Understanding how states try to protect themselves (and develop their own cyber weapons), in addition to comprehending the legal and ethical complications, will be a major element of the course. Finally the concept of deterrence will be evaluated, namely the various state attempts to produce it and the counter-arguments made against the concept overall.

Electives (9 credit hours)

(Students choose 3 courses in the following two sub-categories)

Comparative Politics Specialization

Students are required to choose 1 course from this specialization.

This course examines the African continent to expose the implications of democratization, ethnicity, and development. It will analyze various democratization projects occurring throughout the continent; consider the development of African political thought; domestic and party politics within various countries; and consider the complex consequences to war and conflict in Africa today. Finally, theoretical, empirical and philosophical debates about international relations, foreign aid, grassroots activism and radicalism will be investigated, to provide greater depth and subtlety to the more commonly examined issues of economic development.

This course examines Asia from the perspectives of democracy, political economy, and human rights. It will assess how political and economic factors in the region impact not only individual states, but also transnational relations with other regions like North America and the European Union. How the region’s ongoing economic and political transformation influences governance will be examined. How power interplays with other states on issues pertaining to conflict and human rights will be important. Finally, the course will look at all of these issues from a theoretical and philosophical perspective, asking if culture impacts some of the variations.

This course examines the Greater Middle East (from Morocco to Iran) to expose the issues of democratization, gender relations, and political/economic reform. The material reviews various democratization projects occurring throughout the region, comparing and contrasting strengths and weaknesses, while drawing general conclusions about democracy in the Middle East writ large. The complex and evolving role of women in this process, from the political, economic, and cultural perspectives, is emphasized and used to ascertain future potential trajectories. Theoretical and philosophical debates about Islam, democracy, and civil liberties are investigated.

International Relations Specialization

Students are required to choose 2 courses from this specialization.

This course defines, analyzes, and compares foreign policies across the globe. The materials review internal and external factors that influence and complicate the formation of foreign policy as well as consider the various norms and theories that exist about foreign policy construction within the global environment. Finally, numerous case studies are examined in terms of divergence and variety across states and regions. This course is designed to make students familiar with the foreign-policy thinking of countries that are both allied with and adversarial to the United States.

Disinformation is false information created to deliberately mislead an audience; its purpose is to support its perpetrator’s goals through deception. This course examines several types of disinformation, including “fake news;” how it overlaps with propaganda and misinformation but is also unique; how and why disinformation works; its incentives and consequences (some of which are unintentional); several historical examples of disinformation (including who perpetrated them and why); some sophisticated techniques used in creating disinformation; and how the individual and also society can guard against disinformation but may never completely eliminate it.

This course examines hard and soft power as concepts, theories, and consequential implications in global politics. It will estimate the applications of diplomatic and military strength and the proper context and applicability of each in given complex foreign dilemmas.

This course examines strategic deterrence across various case studies – individual states, various crucial regions, and the larger global context. It will assess how states work within their own regions, to impact not only other states but also transnational relations with major powers. The evolution of deterrence as a concept, both in the classical strategic environment and in the new modern context, will be important. Constraining deterrence and/or utilizing it through diplomacy will also be examined and considered. Finally the course will look at deterrence from a future strategy perspective, asking if there are new variations and differentiations that can be foreseen and addressed.

University Accreditation

Bellevue University is accredited by the Higher Learning Commission (hlcommission.org).

Whether a college, university, or program is accredited is important to students with financial aid, employers who provide tuition assistance, donors, and the federal government.

This program is considered a non-licensure degree/certificate program and is not intended for those seeking licensure or the practice of licensed profession. This program may be relevant to multiple occupations that do not require licensure and was not designed to meet educational requirements for any specific professional license or certification.

*Consult with an admissions counselor to determine your eligible credits, as well as to verify minimum graduation requirements for this degree. Transfer credits must be from a regionally accredited college or university. Bellevue University makes no promises to prospective students regarding the acceptance of credit awarded by examination, credit for prior learning, or credit for transfer until an evaluation has been conducted.

We work with the hard-won experience you bring in the master’s in intelligence studies degree program.

Format

Learn from top-tier professors who have served the nation.

Imagine learning first-hand from women and men who have made careers out of their expertise in intelligence, counterterrorism, global conflict, and international security. In the master’s in intelligence studies program, you’ll gain hands-on knowledge from faculty who have served in the Department of Defense, CIA, Army, and Navy – and have degrees from top universities in the United States.

100% Online learning that works for your life and your goals.

Our flexible online courses are designed to bring quality learning into a format that fits your schedule, without sacrificing meaningful faculty feedback and collaboration with peers across the country. Stay on track with the help of your Student Coach — with you from day one to graduation.

Find out more about the online experience >

Level up quicker with online learning, making an intelligence master’s degree more convenient for you and your schedule.

Tuition & Financial Aid

Graduate degrees can be more affordable than you think.

Earning a degree is an investment in yourself. We want to help you make sure it’s a wise one.

2024 / 2025 Academic Year

Master's Degree

$660 In-Class or Online Cost Per Credit

(Additional fees may apply to individual courses within your major requirements)

Curious about financial aid? We’ve got the answers.

As a graduate student, you may be eligible for up to $20,500 per year in unsubsidized Direct Student Loans.

And, students often apply for graduate program scholarships through Bellevue University or tuition reimbursement through their employers. Talk to us and we’ll help you explore your options.

Learn more about financial aid >

Move forward with a more affordable master’s in intelligence and security studies.

Admissions

Start on the path to your master’s. No GRE or GMAT required.

We believe in reducing roadblocks to education. That’s why our admissions requirements focus only on what matters—helping hardworking students access the education they deserve.

For admission to Bellevue University, applicants must:

  • Possess a bachelor’s or master’s degree from a regionally accredited college or university, or a U.S. equivalent degree from a nationally or internationally accredited college or university.
  • Have maintained a GPA of 2.5 or better from the most recent 60 credits of coursework earned toward the bachelor’s degree or have maintained a GPA of 3.0 or better in previous graduate level coursework earned toward the graduate degree.

If you haven’t already, take a moment to request information about your masters program and get in touch with our admissions team. We’ll help make sure you have what you need and answer your questions.

When you’re ready to apply, start your application online. You’ll then:

  • Submit your deposit to Bellevue University. (You can do this at any point in the process.)
  • Submit your transcripts from past institutions and any other required documentation.
  • Complete the FAFSA and see what grants and loans you’re eligible for.

If you are an international student, please see the following specific information: International Student Master Admissions

You'll just need to create an account and complete a pre-application to Bellevue University through Guild. Once you receive confirmation that your pre-application to Bellevue University has been approved, you'll need to complete the required steps to get fully accepted and registered. These include:

  • Submitting transcripts from past institutions
  • Submitting related documentation

Ready to get started?
Reach out to admissions.

  • Get your questions answered about the Intelligence and Security Studies Degree
  • Understand your financial aid and scholarship options
  • Map out a schedule that fits with your priorities

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