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London City University launches computer resilience degree

14 September 2009

London's City University has launched a masters degree in computer resilience, adding to its stable of IT security qualifications. The university says the course will increase the number of IT professionals capable of preventing, combating or repairing large scale IT failure.

The MSc in Resilience, Assurance and Risk Management for Computer-Based Systems, which starts this academic year, will be taught at the university's centre for software reliability.

According to university officials, graduates will be able to better identify, understand and manage the increasing risks and threats being faced by IT and engineering systems, threats such as physical failures, malicious attack, design faults or user error.

The university said that dealing with these threats requires a unified, system-level understanding of both the technical and the human components of resilience.

"This MSc aims to teach not only specific safety, reliability or security techniques but also a broader knowledge of risk required in advanced technical or management roles within system development, procurement, operation or licensing", said Professor Robin Bloomfield, head of the university's centre for software reliability.

Modules on the course include:

  • An introduction to dependability and resilience
  • Fault tolerance, redundancy and diversity
  • Design and analysis techniques for resilience
  • Information security assurance and digital forensics
  • Socio-technical systems, risk and resilience
  • Probabilistic modelling of dependability for computer-based systems
  • Assurance cases for security, safety, dependability
  • software dependability and software risk management
  • Techniques for software correctness
This article is featured in:
Security Training and Education

 

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