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This introductory webinar provides a foundational overview of research security, from early federal concerns about foreign influence to today’s requirements under NSPM-33 and the CHIPS and Science Act. Designed for researchers, research administrators, and institutional leaders, this session explains how research security policy has evolved, what institutions are required to implement, and what it means for federally funded research going forward. Speaker: Lori Schultz, Deputy Director of the NSF SECURE Center and AVP for Research Administration at Colorado State University Topics covered: How research security emerged as a federal priority The DOJ China Initiative and early cases NSPM-33 and research security program requirements Disclosure requirements and Common Forms Research security training and institutional responsibilities The CHIPS and Science Act and its implications Current implementation status across federal agencies Ongoing challenges for universities and research organizations Level: Beginner This webinar is part of the SECURE Center’s national webinar series supporting the U.S. research community with practical guidance, shared resources, and dialogue on evolving research security requirements. After watching the video, please fill out our 5 minute survey to provide feedback on this webinar! Learn more about the SECURE Center: https://www.secure-center.org/ Funding acknowledgment: This material is based upon work supported by the U.S. National Science Foundation under Cooperative Agreement No. 2403771. Any opinions, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation or other U.S. Government agencies. Stay connected: Subscribe for future webinars and resources Visit the SECURE Center website for tools, guidance, and events Follow us on LinkedIn for updates on research security policy and training