Unity of mission : civilian-military y teams in war and peace / editado por Jon Gunderser, Melanne A. Civic.

Por: Gundersen, Jon, 1945- [editor]Colaborador(es): Civic, Melanne A. [editor]Tipo de material: TextoTextoDetalles de publicación: Alabama : Air University Press, 2016. Descripción: 584 páginas : ilustraciones ; 23 x 15 cm.ISBN: 9781585662470Tema(s): AFGANISTAN | IRAK | ESTADOS UNIDOS | FUERZAS ARMADAS | OPERACIONES INTEGRADAS | RELACIONES CIVICO-MILITARES | OPERACIONES DE ESTABILIDAD | SEGURIDAD SOSTENIBLE
Contenidos:
List of Illustrations
List of Tables.
About the Editors and Authors
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Iraq and Afghanistan and Beyond: Jon Gundersen
Executive Summary: Jon Gundersen
Part 1: History of civilian-military teams: America´s coming of age: 1.Nontraditional Missions: civil tasks, military forces and complex operations; R. Scott Moore // 2.Civilian-Military Teaming (1989-1995): An Examination of postconflict operations in Panamá, Kuwait and Haiti; Dennis Craig Barlow
Part 2: The Vietnam war (1954-1975): 3.Measuring success: evaluating counterinsurgency progress in Vietnam (1966-1975); Richard W. Stewart // 4.An eyewitness account of counterinsurgency and civilian-military teams in Vietnam; Rufus Phillips // 5.The present past of Vietnam: implications of civilian operations and revolutionary development support for today´s "Other wars"; Sandra A. Scham
Part 3: The post-9/11 wars: Iraq and Afghanistan: 6.The origins of provincial reconstruction team: Almost Present at the creation; Joseph J. Collins // 7.Civilian agencies in a war zone: Afghanistan and Iraq; Bernard Carreau // 8.Civilian-military capacity-building teams: the view from Anbar province (2006-2009); James Soriano // 9.Hope doesn´t live here anymore: an afghan civilian-military vision - One commander´s experience; Eric W. Hommel // 10.How department of defense spending was used to resuscitate local business: A select history of civilian-military engagement in Iraq; Andrew Shaver
Part 4: International perspectives: Beyond Afghanistan and Iraq: 11.From Afghanistan to Africa: civilian-military teaming in a whole new world; Christopher Holshek // 12.A whole greater than the sum of its parts, or if it were only army stuff, it would be easy; Mark N. Popov // 13.Peacebuilding: Germany´s military mission: The soft power approach and civilian-military teaming; J.D. Bindenagel // 14.The Norwegian approach to Afghanistan: civilian-military segregation; Karsten Friis // 15.So you are going to be working with the united nations: A few insights on integration; David C. Becker
Part 5: Nongovernmental and other perspectives: Sharing the space: 16.Civil society experiences of, conflicts with, and recommendations for civilian-military teams; Lisa Schirch // 17.Achieving coordinated results in stabilization, reconstruction, and postwar peacebuilding: Lessons from the US civilian-military experience in Afghanistan; Andrea Strimling Yodsampa // 18.Civilian-military engagement in Afghanistan: How market-based approaches enable and enhance counterinsurgencies; Joanna Buckley and Ryan Gawn
Part 6: Training, resourcing, roles and missions: 19.Training the civilian-military team in the twenty-first century; Omer C. Tooley // 20.Civilian-military teaming: The when, where and how; Mike McCoy // 21.Learning to negotiate shared space: US civilian-military roles in unsecured environments; Marcia Byrom Hartwell
Part 7: Preparing for the future: 22.Developing intelligence capabilities for counterinsurgency and stabilization: Learning from the US experience with sociocultural analysis in Iraq and Afghanistan; Nathan White // 23.The provincial reconstruction team experience in Iraq: A case study for improving integration in stabilization and reconstruction operations; Stuart W. Bowen Jr. // 24.Fostering effective civilian-military integration: The need or a standardized, field-based stabilization methodology; Jason S. Alexander, james W. Derleth and Sloan Mann // 25.A civilian center of excellence as a mechanism for civilian-military coordination; James Kunder // 26.What is the way ahead for rigorous research on civilian-military teams in complex contingencies?; Christopher J. Lamb and James Douglas Orton
Abbreviations
Bibliography
Index
Illustrations: Figures: 4.1.Editor Jon Gundersen, as ayoung military advisory team member in Vietnam // 7.1.Civilian-military team command structure in Afghanistan // 7.2.Root causes of insurgency // 8.1.Anbar Province, Iraq // 8.2.The author with Anbar Governor Ma´amoun Sami Rasheed and Sheikh Ahmed Abu Risha, head of the Anbar Awakening, October 2007 // 11.1.UNMIL CIMIC civilian-military transition management process // 11.2.The Armed Force os Liberia´s first Bailey bridge launch in December 2008 // 11.3.The Liberian project manager of a youth agricultural training farm explains the pilot project to the author and staff officers of the resident Bangladesh peacekeeping battalion // 11.4.What´s wrong with this picture? // 11.5.What´s right with this picture? // 12.1.Afghan National Security Forces-primary organizations // 12.2.The DDCT, December 2009 // 16.1.Humanitarian principles // 17.1.Model of coordination // 22.1.US civilian-military chains of command in Afghanistan // 24.1.PRT lines of authority // 24.2.Structure of US mission, showing position of CORDS: May 1967 // 24.3.The District Stability Framework in four phases
Tables: 16.1.Comparison of CSO and military goals // 16.2.Spectrum of civil society-military coordination // 17.1.Types of coordinated results // 17.2.Interorganizational and intraorganizational factors // 20.1.Conflict stages align with diplomacy and military phases // 26.1.Six types of cross-functional teams // 26.2.Ten core variables (and subvariables) affecting civilian-military team effectiveness
Resumen: Si bien se ha escrito mucho sobre los equipos civiles y militares en Vietnam y, más recientemente, en Irak y Afganistán, el tema no se ha abordado en una sola publicación integral que contenga un contexto histórico y refleje una amplia diversidad de puntos de vista. Es la intención de los coeditores de Unity of Mission llenar este vacío. Los autores están convencidos de que sin unidad entre los actores militares y civiles, el éxito de la misión a largo plazo es, en el mejor de los casos, difícil. Creen que los ensayos contenidos en este volumen dan fe de esta afirmación.
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Incluye bibliografía, referencias, índice.

List of Illustrations

List of Tables.

About the Editors and Authors

Acknowledgments

Introduction: Iraq and Afghanistan and Beyond: Jon Gundersen

Executive Summary: Jon Gundersen

Part 1: History of civilian-military teams: America´s coming of age: 1.Nontraditional Missions: civil tasks, military forces and complex operations; R. Scott Moore // 2.Civilian-Military Teaming (1989-1995): An Examination of postconflict operations in Panamá, Kuwait and Haiti; Dennis Craig Barlow

Part 2: The Vietnam war (1954-1975): 3.Measuring success: evaluating counterinsurgency progress in Vietnam (1966-1975); Richard W. Stewart // 4.An eyewitness account of counterinsurgency and civilian-military teams in Vietnam; Rufus Phillips // 5.The present past of Vietnam: implications of civilian operations and revolutionary development support for today´s "Other wars"; Sandra A. Scham

Part 3: The post-9/11 wars: Iraq and Afghanistan: 6.The origins of provincial reconstruction team: Almost Present at the creation; Joseph J. Collins // 7.Civilian agencies in a war zone: Afghanistan and Iraq; Bernard Carreau // 8.Civilian-military capacity-building teams: the view from Anbar province (2006-2009); James Soriano // 9.Hope doesn´t live here anymore: an afghan civilian-military vision - One commander´s experience; Eric W. Hommel // 10.How department of defense spending was used to resuscitate local business: A select history of civilian-military engagement in Iraq; Andrew Shaver

Part 4: International perspectives: Beyond Afghanistan and Iraq: 11.From Afghanistan to Africa: civilian-military teaming in a whole new world; Christopher Holshek // 12.A whole greater than the sum of its parts, or if it were only army stuff, it would be easy; Mark N. Popov // 13.Peacebuilding: Germany´s military mission: The soft power approach and civilian-military teaming; J.D. Bindenagel // 14.The Norwegian approach to Afghanistan: civilian-military segregation; Karsten Friis // 15.So you are going to be working with the united nations: A few insights on integration; David C. Becker

Part 5: Nongovernmental and other perspectives: Sharing the space: 16.Civil society experiences of, conflicts with, and recommendations for civilian-military teams; Lisa Schirch // 17.Achieving coordinated results in stabilization, reconstruction, and postwar peacebuilding: Lessons from the US civilian-military experience in Afghanistan; Andrea Strimling Yodsampa // 18.Civilian-military engagement in Afghanistan: How market-based approaches enable and enhance counterinsurgencies; Joanna Buckley and Ryan Gawn

Part 6: Training, resourcing, roles and missions: 19.Training the civilian-military team in the twenty-first century; Omer C. Tooley // 20.Civilian-military teaming: The when, where and how; Mike McCoy // 21.Learning to negotiate shared space: US civilian-military roles in unsecured environments; Marcia Byrom Hartwell

Part 7: Preparing for the future: 22.Developing intelligence capabilities for counterinsurgency and stabilization: Learning from the US experience with sociocultural analysis in Iraq and Afghanistan; Nathan White // 23.The provincial reconstruction team experience in Iraq: A case study for improving integration in stabilization and reconstruction operations; Stuart W. Bowen Jr. // 24.Fostering effective civilian-military integration: The need or a standardized, field-based stabilization methodology; Jason S. Alexander, james W. Derleth and Sloan Mann // 25.A civilian center of excellence as a mechanism for civilian-military coordination; James Kunder // 26.What is the way ahead for rigorous research on civilian-military teams in complex contingencies?; Christopher J. Lamb and James Douglas Orton

Abbreviations

Bibliography

Index

Illustrations: Figures: 4.1.Editor Jon Gundersen, as ayoung military advisory team member in Vietnam // 7.1.Civilian-military team command structure in Afghanistan // 7.2.Root causes of insurgency // 8.1.Anbar Province, Iraq // 8.2.The author with Anbar Governor Ma´amoun Sami Rasheed and Sheikh Ahmed Abu Risha, head of the Anbar Awakening, October 2007 // 11.1.UNMIL CIMIC civilian-military transition management process // 11.2.The Armed Force os Liberia´s first Bailey bridge launch in December 2008 // 11.3.The Liberian project manager of a youth agricultural training farm explains the pilot project to the author and staff officers of the resident Bangladesh peacekeeping battalion // 11.4.What´s wrong with this picture? // 11.5.What´s right with this picture? // 12.1.Afghan National Security Forces-primary organizations // 12.2.The DDCT, December 2009 // 16.1.Humanitarian principles // 17.1.Model of coordination // 22.1.US civilian-military chains of command in Afghanistan // 24.1.PRT lines of authority // 24.2.Structure of US mission, showing position of CORDS: May 1967 // 24.3.The District Stability Framework in four phases

Tables: 16.1.Comparison of CSO and military goals // 16.2.Spectrum of civil society-military coordination // 17.1.Types of coordinated results // 17.2.Interorganizational and intraorganizational factors // 20.1.Conflict stages align with diplomacy and military phases // 26.1.Six types of cross-functional teams // 26.2.Ten core variables (and subvariables) affecting civilian-military team effectiveness

Si bien se ha escrito mucho sobre los equipos civiles y militares en Vietnam y, más recientemente, en Irak y Afganistán, el tema no se ha abordado en una sola publicación integral que contenga un contexto histórico y refleje una amplia diversidad de puntos de vista. Es la intención de los coeditores de Unity of Mission llenar este vacío. Los autores están convencidos de que sin unidad entre los actores militares y civiles, el éxito de la misión a largo plazo es, en el mejor de los casos, difícil. Creen que los ensayos contenidos en este volumen dan fe de esta afirmación.

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