Publications Tag: policies

– Japan’s Security Strategy and Its Impact on U.S. National Security Interests
– Employing Maritime Security Response Teams as the Nation’s Maritime Crisis Response Force
– Lessons for Cyber Policymakers
– Lifting the Interagency Fog of Information: Blockchain Information-Sharing and Radical Inclusion
– Interagency Approaches to Prevent the Reoccurrence of Conflict in Sierra Leone
– Assessing the Impact of American and Chinese Economic Competition in Sub-Saharan Africa
– Lessons on Collaboration from Recent Conflicts: The Whole-of-Nation and Whole-of-Government Approaches in Action

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Inside this issue:  Adapting to Change: Strategic Turning Points and the CIA/DoD Relationship, by David Oakley; Everyone Else is They: A New Framework for Operational Culture, by Megan Kraushaar; The National Security Council Deputies Committee – Engine of the Policy Process, by Mark Wilcox …and much more.

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This study focuses on security at the U.S. Southwest border, and begins with a broad view of border region issues before narrowing its focus to security and how DoD can support a whole of government approach to border security. The authors examined the border region from various perspectives and applied selected tools of anthropology, physical and cultural geography, and military doctrine.

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by David T. Culkin

In an era of persistent threats to the homeland and constricted decision cycles, American policy makers must embrace information sharing if they are to protect the citizens and infrastructure of the United States. The key to advancing homeland security lies in managing information so efficiently and effectively that U.S. policy leaders rapidly acquire the understanding they need to make decisions…

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by Nicholas H. Riegg

The military’s relatively new “full spectrum” approach to warfare emphasizes that military and other U.S. interagency partners must address the full gamut of needs of nations defeated in war or ravaged by natural or manmade catastrophes.

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