Sam Jackson

Sam Jackson

Assistant Professor, Emergency Management and Homeland Security Department
College of Emergency Preparedness, Homeland Security and Cybersecurity
Department of Emergency Management and Homeland Security

Contact

ETEC 260
Education

PhD, Social Science, Syracuse University

MA, Political Science, Syracuse University

MA, Religion and Political Life, University of Manchester

BA, Religious Studies, University of Tennessee at Knoxville

 

Sam Jackson
About

Sam Jackson is an Assistant Professor in the College of Emergency Preparedness, Homeland Security, and Cybersecurity at the University at Albany. He completed his PhD in Syracuse University's Social Science Doctoral Program in the Maxwell School, where he was also an affiliate of the Center for Computational and Data Sciences in the iSchool and of the Institute for National Security and Counterterrorism. He has also been a visiting researcher with VOX-pol, an EU-funded network of excellence on violent online political extremism.

Dr. Jackson has several lines of research. He primarily studies far-right extremism in America, particularly anti-government extremism. His second line of research investigates issues related to extremism online and responses to extremism online. In a third area, he examines behavior on social media platforms, particularly political activism (for example, around the politics of guns in America) or activity in the context of conflicts and crises (for example, during hurricanes). He also develops methods and open-source tools to analyze internet-based data.

His research has appeared in Terrorism and Political Violence, Proceedings of the International Conference on Social Media & Society, and George Washington University’s Program on Extremism. His research has also received media coverage, for example in The Washington Post, Vox, and The Minneapolis Star Tribune.

 

CEHC Courses Taught

CEHC 310 Research Seminar in EHC

CINF 496/596 Intermediate/ Advanced Special Topics in Informatics

 

Research Interests

Political Extremism and Responses to Extremism; Digital Communication Technology During Conflict and Crisis; Research Methods and Ethics; Computational Social Science