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Securing tyrants or fostering reform? : U.S. internal security assistance to repressive and transitioning regimes
Authors: ---
ISBN: 1281181048 9786611181048 0833042629 1433709430 0833040189 9780833042620 9780833040183 Year: 2006 Publisher: Santa Monica, CA : RAND Corporation,

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Abstract

Does U.S. assistance to the security forces of repressive states improve the effectiveness of internal security forces in countering security threats? Does it improve the accountability and human rights records of these forces? This book addresses these questions by examining the results of U.


Book
Training and assistance of foreign police in U.S. stability efforts
Authors: ---
ISBN: 1621009858 9781621009856 9781621009832 1621009831 Year: 2012 Publisher: New York : Nova Publishers,


Periodical
The DISAM journal of international security assistance management.
Author:
ISSN: 23756519 Year: 1982 Publisher: Wright Patterson AFB, OH : Defense Institute of Security Assistance Management


Book
Identifying and mitigating risks in security sector assistance for Africa's fragile states
Authors: --- ---
ISBN: 0833091425 9780833091420 9780833087980 0833087983 Year: 2015 Publisher: Santa Monica, CA : Rand Corporation

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This report explores the nature of the risks inherent in U.S. security sector assistance to the fragile states of Africa and how the United States might better anticipate and mitigate these risks. It examines these issues through a review of qualitative and quantitative literature from both the academic and policy fields and through interviews conducted throughout the agencies of the U.S. government. The quantitative literature suggests a stark dilemma for those responsible for U.S. security sector assistance to the AFRICOM area of responsibility: The countries that are most in need of assistance are usually the ones least able to make positive use of it. Case studies of security sector assistance in the fragile countries in Africa are used to trace multiple specific pathways by which such assistance can have negative second- and third-order effects. Finally, the report provides numerous recommendations about ways in which the United States can improve the processes by which it monitors and evaluates, plans, and implements security sector assistance in the fragile states of Africa and more generally.


Periodical
U.S. overseas loans, and grants, and assistance from international organizations.
Author:
ISSN: 01960563 Year: 1978 Publisher: [Washington, D.C.] : Office of Planning and Budgeting, Bureau for Program Policy and Coordination, Agency for International Development

Scuds or butter? : the political economy of arms control in the Middle East
Authors: ---
ISBN: 0815776632 Year: 1993 Publisher: Washington, D.C. Brookings Institution

Spoils of war : the human cost of America's arms trade /.
Author:
ISBN: 0684827263 Year: 1997 Publisher: New York Free Press

Taking the stand : The testimony of Oliver L. North
Authors: ---
ISBN: 0671659383 Year: 1987 Publisher: New York Pocket books


Book
Evaluating the impact of the Department of Defense Regional Centers for Security Studies
Authors: --- --- --- --- --- et al.
ISBN: 0833086499 9780833086495 9780833085139 0833085131 Year: 2014 Publisher: Santa Monica, CA : Rand

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Abstract

The five U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) Regional Centers for Security Studies have been helping partner nations build strategic capacity for almost 20 years. However, recent DoD budget constraints have put pressure on the regional centers (RCs) to increase efficiency. The Office of the Secretary of Defense (OSD) asked RAND to conduct a study on the overall impact of the RCs, their effectiveness in advancing DoD policy priorities, the ways in which they assess their programs, and ways in which they could improve their impact and efficiency and the resulting outcomes. The RAND study team found that centers have had great success at the missions they have undertaken. They are high-impact components of U.S. security cooperation and engagement efforts, despite their relatively small budgets. The team identified 24 ways in which the centers advance U.S. interests, including building partner capacity, building relationships, fostering pro-U.S. outlooks, offering unique opportunities for engagement, and promoting regional dialogue that reduces tensions. However, RCs should improve impact-oriented data collection and analysis for improved assessment, methodically collecting such data over time. OSD and the combatant commands should improve their oversight and management of the RCs to ensure alignment with department- and theater-level objectives. In addition, OSD should maintain the RCs' focus on regional security challenges rather than refashioning them to address specific threats. Options to consider for greater impact include evaluating the balance between core residential courses and in-region workshops and determining whether and to what extent the centers should develop customized programs for DoD components so as to secure funds beyond the core budget they receive from OSD.


Book
New security and justice sector partnership models : implications of the Arab uprisings
Authors: --- --- --- --- --- et al.
ISBN: 0833089854 9780833089854 0833085751 9780833085757 Year: 2014 Publisher: Santa Monica, CA : Rand Corporation

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Abstract

The United States faces a unique set of challenges and opportunities in strengthening security and justice sector partnerships in the Middle East and North Africa. Against the backdrop of the Arab uprisings, the U.S. government has issued policy guidance relating to foreign assistance more broadly and security sector assistance in particular. RAND researchers analyzed potential new partnership models that could help implement this guidance, simultaneously strengthening security and justice sector cooperation and promoting reform across the Arab world and beyond. They devised the Enhanced Partnership Planning Model, which focuses on improving collaborative planning, rather than on using assistance as leverage to require partner nations to do what the United States wants. The model serves as a flexible framework that could support tailored, rigorous SJS planning by U.S. and partner nation stakeholders. This framework can support both policy-makers and program managers as they seek to implement new policy guidelines that integrate elements of accountability and reform while continuing to advance core U.S. interests and equities in a rapidly evolving regional context.

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