Description |
1 online resource (ix, 78 pages) |
Series |
PKSOI papers |
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PKSOI papers.
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Contents |
Introduction -- Defining "transition" in context -- Transition as process -- Transition as authority transfer -- Transition as phasing -- Transition as end state -- Using context to "define" transition -- Types of transition -- War-to-peace transitions -- Power transitions -- Societal transitions -- Political and democratic transitions -- Security transitions -- Economic transitions -- Crosscutting studies -- Approaches to transition -- Whole of government approach -- Mentoring and advising -- Comprehensive approach -- Counterinsurgency (COIN) approach -- Developmental transition -- Available tools for transition -- Measuring progress in conflict environments -- Post-conflict reconstruction essential task matrix -- Interagency conflict assessment framework -- The Sphere Project -- Tactical Conflict assessment framework -- United Nations transition strategy -- Joint, interagency, intergovernmental, and multinational tools -- Findings and recommendations -- Conclusion |
Summary |
This monograph addresses the challenging topic of transition in post-conflict stability operations and is intended for a wide audience that includes military and civilian policymakers, international development experts, and scholars in academe. It is a primer, systematic review, and comprehensive assessment of the fields of research and practice. It presents and appraises the major lenses (process, authority transfer, phasing, and end state), categories (war-to-peace, power, societal, political-democratic, security, and economic), approaches, and tools under which post-conflict transitions are conceived. It lays the groundwork for both future research and greater collaboration among diverse international and local actors who operate in post-conflict environments, to develop a comprehensive definition of transition and adequate tools to address all facets of the concept. It provides recommendations for future research and improved transition policy, which include: cross-institutional (political, security, economic) and multi-level (local, regional, national) studies that explore the interdependencies between simultaneous transitions; underlying assumptions of current transition tools and indicators; relationships between transition and institutional resilience; and, thresholds and tipping points between transition phases. -- Excerpted from Summary, p. vii-ix |
Notes |
Title from PDF title screen (viewed Jan. 13, 2011) |
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"September 2010." |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 62-78) |
Subject |
Nation-building.
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Postwar reconstruction.
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Interim governments.
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Political stability.
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Peace-building.
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Civil-military relations.
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Intergovernmental cooperation.
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Armed Forces -- Stability operations.
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Civil-military relations.
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Intergovernmental cooperation.
|
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Interim governments.
|
|
Nation-building.
|
|
Peace-building.
|
|
Political stability.
|
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Postwar reconstruction.
|
SUBJECT |
United States -- Armed Forces -- Stability operations.
http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh2006001325
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Subject |
United States.
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Form |
Electronic book
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Author |
Chura-Beaver, Jacqueline.
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Army War College (U.S.). Strategic Studies Institute.
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Peacekeeping and Stability Operations Institute.
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ISBN |
1584874643 |
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9781584874645 |
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