Cybersecurity maturity assessment framework for higher education institutions in Saudi Arabia

PeerJ Comput Sci. 2021 Sep 9:7:e703. doi: 10.7717/peerj-cs.703. eCollection 2021.

Abstract

The Saudi Arabia government has proposed different frameworks such as the CITC's Cybersecurity Regulatory Framework (CRF) and the NCA's Essential Cybersecurity Controls (ECC) to ensure data and infrastructure security in all IT-based systems. However, these frameworks lack a practical, published mechanism that continuously assesses the organizations' security level, especially in HEI (Higher Education Institutions) systems. This paper proposes a Cybersecurity Maturity Assessment Framework (SCMAF) for HEIs in Saudi Arabia. SCMAF is a comprehensive, customized security maturity assessment framework for Saudi organizations aligned with local and international security standards. The framework can be used as a self-assessment method to establish the security level and highlight the weaknesses and mitigation plans that need to be implemented. SCMAF is a mapping and codification model for all regulations that the Saudi organizations must comply with. The framework uses different levels of maturity against which the security performance of each organization can be measured. SCMAF is implemented as a lightweight assessment tool that could be provided online through a web-based service or offline by downloading the tool to ensure the organizations' data privacy. Organizations that apply this framework can assess the security level of their systems, conduct a gap analysis and create a mitigation plan. The assessment results are communicated to the organization using visual score charts per security requirement per level attached with an evaluation report.

Keywords: Audit tool; CITC; COVID-19; CRF; Cybersecurity; ECC; GDPR; Higher education; ISO27001; Maturity assessment; NCA; Saudi Arabia.

Grants and funding

This work was supported by the research project ‘Security Maturity Assessment Framework for Saudi Organizations’, Prince Sultan University, Saudi Arabia (grant number SEED-CCIS-2021-70). Prince Sultan University also paid the article processing charges. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.