The research institution island communities have never had.
Island communities — from Hawaii and Guam to Malta, Trinidad, and the Maldives — face public safety challenges that mainland security frameworks were never designed to solve. Isolated supply chains, limited law enforcement resources, concentrated populations, and unique emergency management constraints require dedicated, specialized research. ISPI builds that research.
ISPI was established by practitioners — not academics. Our research draws on verified operational experience across every domain we study: military security operations, metropolitan law enforcement, U.S. Embassy diplomatic security, FEMA-certified emergency management, and campus safety administration. That practitioner foundation is what separates ISPI research from every other policy institution addressing these topics.
ISPI's core thesis: the structural differences between island and continental geography — mutual aid limitations, supply chain singularity, workforce constraints, and concentrated population vulnerability — are sufficiently fundamental that adaptation is insufficient. Island-specific frameworks must be built from first principles.
"Every policy recommendation we publish has been stress-tested against real operational conditions — not theoretical scenarios. That is the ISPI difference."
— Warren Pulley, Founder & Executive DirectorWarren Pulley — Founder & Executive Director
Warren Pulley is the founder and executive director of the Island Security Policy Institute. His operational career encompasses U.S. Air Force nuclear security, service as a Los Angeles Police Department veteran, diplomatic security operations at the U.S. Embassy Baghdad — where he maintained a zero-incident record under sustained daily threat — FEMA-certified emergency management, university campus safety administration, and supervisory leadership in the Hawaii National Guard's Youth Challenge Academy. He is BTAM-certified and the author of six published books on threat assessment and public safety policy.
Warren Pulley's 40+ year practitioner career spans six distinct operational domains — each one directly informing a research pillar of the Island Security Policy Institute. His institutional knowledge base is not derived from academic study of these domains. It is built from operational service within them.
25 research topics across seven policy domains.
ISPI conducts original research across 25 active topics in seven policy domains. Every output is practitioner-led — informed by decades of direct operational experience in each field we study. All ISPI publications are available for free download.
Research Independence Policy
The Island Security Policy Institute maintains full editorial independence on all research — whether self-directed or commissioned. Commissioning clients do not influence ISPI's research conclusions, policy recommendations, or published findings. Clients formally acknowledge this independence as a condition of commission before any research begins.
ISPI discloses all funding sources in published research in accordance with standard think tank transparency practices. This policy is not a constraint on what ISPI can research. It is the mechanism that makes ISPI's research worth reading — and the reason that findings carry credibility with the government agencies, legislative bodies, and peer institutions that our clients ultimately need to persuade.
ISPI is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization registered in the State of Hawaii · SAM.gov registered federal contractor · NAICS 541720 · Independent · Nonpartisan
AI-Assisted Research Synthesis
ISPI's research integrates advanced AI-assisted analysis tools alongside its practitioner expertise base. These tools are used to accelerate literature review, cross-domain pattern identification, and policy framework development — functions analogous to the quantitative modeling and data systems used by RAND and Brookings. All research conclusions, policy recommendations, and published findings are developed, reviewed, and approved by ISPI's human research leadership. AI tools augment practitioner expertise — they do not substitute for it. ISPI discloses this capability in the interest of full institutional transparency.
Research Grounded in Federal Standards
ISPI's research draws on and extends the frameworks, data, and guidance of the following federal agencies — identifying where those frameworks succeed and where island-specific adaptations are required.