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ID:
107666
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Publication |
2011.
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Summary/Abstract |
In this article the authors examine two set of issues that constrain contemporary peace support operations (PSOs): one centered on the kinds of knowledge prevalent in PSOs and the second involving the organizational structures that characterize them. The authors' aim is to show the deep discursive and structural limitations and contradictions that continue to characterize the actions of armed forces and the dominance of militaristic thinking within PSOs. This article centers on multidimensional peacekeeping marked by emphasizing two main points in regard to the complex nature of such peacekeeping. First, Western military thinking is still dominant in the professional discourse of peacekeeping despite the fact that in many cases it is less relevant to the arenas where it is applied (in weakened or failed states). Second, forces in second-generation peacekeeping missions are by definition a form of hybrid organizations, and therefore conceptual changes in regard to PSOs not only involve the realm of knowledge but also entail practical consequences for the very organizational means used to achieve their aims. The authors' analysis demonstrates the blending, hybridization, and linkages that are an essential part of PSOs as processes that carry both advantages and disadvantages for organizational action.
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2 |
ID:
073784
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Publication |
2006.
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Summary/Abstract |
The demand for military personnel in peace support operations (PSOs) has been very high for over a decade, compared with demands during the Cold War. This increasing demand for military peace support personnel contrasts dramatically with the significant decrease in the number of military personnel since the end of the Cold War. Indeed, the primary instrument to execute tasks assigned to military forces is manpower. The contribution of this paper is a survey of different types of PSOs, with the focus on the skills and abilities required of military personnel in those operations. The key to an effective operation is to select peace support personnel with the skills appropriate to that particular mission. This paper is divided into three sections, starting with a discussion of the supply and demand for military personnel. The paper then reviews different types of PSOs and their associated personnel requirements. The final section considers a mechanism for matching military personnel to appropriate PSOs.
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3 |
ID:
079101
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Publication |
2007.
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Summary/Abstract |
The Nordic states have embraced the thesis that development and security are strongly interdependent. While they have been heavily and continuously involved in Africa as donors in the development field, their military engagement is less consistent. The article argues that the foreign policy strategies of the Nordic states are designed to maximize international influence by enhancing their reputations and images. However, those foreign policies are divided into separate policy fields, or segments, working within their own international frameworks. Since different international frameworks appreciate actions and behaviour differently, national integration of development-security strategies is very difficult to achieve
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4 |
ID:
054691
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5 |
ID:
085481
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Publication |
2008.
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Summary/Abstract |
Not all militaries are able to learn counterinsurgency (COIN). Whether a military has the capacity to do so is determined by specific factors: a favourable political environment; and pragmatism within the respective military. During the 1970s and 1980s, the South African military exhibited both and learned COIN to devastating effect. Post 1990, however, the political environment has proven unfavourable for the continuing of COIN by the new South African National Defence Force (SANDF), and the military no longer practises COIN to any significant extent. Problematically, new commitments in peace support operations, in otherwise insurgent conflicts, are giving rise to a need for many of the COIN skills and tactics discarded during the transition. The strict anti-COIN position currently adhered to by the military is hamstringing its own ability to fulfil its new designated tasks and strategic objectives.
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6 |
ID:
110567
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