Emergency Management · Georgia

Emergency Management colleges in Georgia

CampusPin lists 93 U.S. colleges in Georgia that offer Emergency Management programs. Compare tuition, acceptance rate, and enrollment in the table below, every figure links back to the institution's official IPEDS data.

Emergency management teaches you to plan for, respond to, and recover from disasters using the incident command system, fitting people drawn to public safety and coordinated crisis work.

Schools in Georgia that offer Emergency Management

Emergency Management programs in Georgia: by the numbers

A quick comparison of the 50 schools (of 93 total) listed above, drawn from each institution's published IPEDS data.

Schools listed

93

Public / private

30 / 20

Universities / 2-year

30 / 20

Cities represented

32

In-state tuition range

$2,736–$60,774

Median in-state tuition

$7,023

Figures reflect the schools currently listed and each institution's most recent reported data. Verify current tuition and admissions details with the school before applying.

What you'll study in a Emergency Management program

  • Incident command system and the National Incident Management System framework
  • Hazard identification, vulnerability analysis, and risk assessment
  • Emergency operations planning and continuity-of-operations development
  • The mitigation, preparedness, response, and recovery disaster cycle
  • Tabletop exercises, drills, and emergency operations center simulations
  • Crisis communication, public information, and media coordination
  • Disaster law, ethics, and intergovernmental policy
  • Geographic information systems and hazard-mapping tools
  • Volunteer, donations, and resource coordination during relief operations

Where a Emergency Management degree can lead

  • Emergency Management Director
  • Emergency Preparedness Coordinator
  • Business Continuity Manager
  • Disaster Recovery Specialist
  • Public Safety Director
  • Homeland Security Analyst

Typical pay: Early-career wages vary by employer, region, and experience (BLS, 2024 emergency management directors median $86,130).

Emergency management is the study of how communities and organizations prepare for, respond to, and recover from natural and human-caused disasters such as floods, wildfires, pandemics, industrial accidents, and terrorist attacks. Grounded in the incident command system, students learn to assess hazards and risks, build contingency and continuity plans, coordinate joint operations across police, fire, medical, and volunteer responders, and manage relief efforts. Coursework spans the full disaster cycle of mitigation, preparedness, response, and recovery, alongside the law, ethics, public communication, and homeland security issues that shape decisions made under pressure. Unlike homeland security, which centers on national defense, intelligence, and counterterrorism policy, emergency management focuses on the operational craft of running an incident at the local, regional, and organizational level; and unlike public administration, it concentrates specifically on hazards, response logistics, and life-safety operations rather than general government management.

This field is most often pursued as a bachelor's degree, though associate programs and graduate degrees exist for those entering through allied roles or seeking advancement. Programs typically combine classroom study with tabletop exercises, scenario simulations, and a capstone or internship in which students draft an actual emergency operations plan or staff a mock emergency operations center. There is no single national license to practice, but many practitioners pursue voluntary professional certification, and roles in public agencies may require background checks and incident-management training; students should verify any program-specific accreditation or certification requirements directly with the school and relevant agencies. Graduates work in city, county, and state emergency management offices, federal agencies, hospitals and health systems, universities, utilities, and private firms that handle business continuity and disaster recovery.

In federal data for the closely related occupation of emergency management directors, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports a 2024 median wage of $86,130 and projects employment to grow about 3% from 2024 to 2034; a bachelor's degree is the typical entry-level education for that occupation. National figures are occupation-wide medians across all experience levels, not starting wages or graduate outcomes.

Find more Emergency Management schools

Use CampusPin's filter-first search to narrow 93+ Emergency Management programs in Georgia by tuition, school size, acceptance rate, and campus setting.