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Böcker utgivna av Centre for Strategic & International Studies,U.S.

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  • av Carl Meacham
    687

    This report examines the fundamental link between Mexico's economic performance and migration to the United States, with a particular focus on the post-NAFTA time period.

  • - Clarifying the Limits of Maritime Dispute
    av Gregory B. Poling
    687

    Satellite imagery and geospatial analysis tools offer an unprecedented opportunity to harness new technologies in order to help resolve boundary disputes. The South China Sea in Focus: Clarifying the Limits of Maritime Dispute uses these tools to provide a first and necessary step toward tackling the overlapping maritime disputes in the South China Sea.

  • av Ted Osius
    607

    Twenty years ago, India launched its "Look East" policy. For most of those 20 years, Myanmar's isolation, mistrust between India and its neighbors, and poor infrastructure connectivity hindered the development of links between South and Southeast Asia.

  • av Sadika Hameed
    591

    The CSIS Working Group on Private-Sector Development in Fragile, Conflict-Affected, and Violent States identifies tools available to the international business community and the U.S. government to assist these countries, as well as the gaps in needed resources.

  • av Gregory Sanders
    797

    In a time of austerity, the U.S. government's reliance on the private sector for a range of services has declined for two consecutive years. Even so, real services contract spending in 2012 remains more than 80 percent above the level in 2000. This report examines contract factors, like competition, funding mechanism, and vehicle, while also looking at industrial base factors like vendor market share by size and top contractors by total services revenue.

  • - Afghan Economics and Outside Aid
    av Anthony H. Cordesman
    867

    After more than a decade of fighting in Afghanistan, the United States and its allies are set to transfer security responsibilities to Afghan forces in 2014. This transition poses many challenges, and much will depend on the future of Afghan politics, governance, corruption, development, security, and economics. How the United States manages the transition is vital for any hopes of creating a secure Afghanistan, as well as preventing the reemergence of the Taliban and other terrorist groups. The Afghan War in 2013 honestly assesses the benefits, costs, and risks involved in transition. It is essential reading for an in-depth understanding of the complex forces and intricacies of the United States¿ role in Afghanistan and the difficulties involved in creating a stable Afghanistan in 2014 and beyond. Afghanistan is still at war and will probably be at war long after 2014. At the same time, the coming cuts in the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) and cuts in military and civil aid, along with the country¿s fractious politics and insecurity, will interact with a wide range of additional factors that threaten to derail the transition. These factors, examined in this three-volume study, highlight the need to make the internal political, governmental, economic, and security dimensions of the transition as effective as possible. This will require a new degree of realism about what the Afghans can and cannot accomplish, about the best approaches to shaping the Afghan National Security Forces (ANSF), and the need for better planned and managed outside aid.

  • av Clark A. Murdock
    607

    This report was produced by the CSIS Nuclear Consensus Working Group (NCWG) to assist the Obama administration in forging, during its second term, an enduring consensus about the U.S. nuclear posture.

  • av Sadika Hameed
    567

    One of the barriers to investing in Pakistan's private sector has been the perceptions of risk due to insecurity and corruption. This report suggests that opportunities for economic cooperation are hidden among those real risks.

  • - Balancing Ground Forces and Future Challenges Risk in USCENTCOM and USPACOM
    av Nathan Freier
    687

    This study endeavors to identify ground force options that are most important to the security of core U.S. interests in two key regions of the world: the Middle East and South Asia; and the Asia Pacific. It is meant to help the Department of Defense define future challenges risk as it relates to ground forces and identify and classify specific qualitative risks that could undermine future operational success.

  • - Developing a Comprehensive Approach in a Period of Economic Stress
    av Haruko Sugiyama
    537

    Recent years have seen a considerable shift in the sources of financial assistance for global health activities. With the private sector as well as emerging economies joining the more developed nations as major players, the balance of power is changing, leading to a momentous shift in perceptions of "global health."

  • - Complicating Adversary Acquisition and Misuse of Biological Agents
    av Carol Kuntz
    687

    A contradiction sits at the core of U.S. biological threat prevention policy. Despite the U.S. government accepting the scientific and industrial costs of a domestic biosecurity system, it has not committed the diplomatic and financial resources needed to successfully promote the global adoption of similar systems.

  • av Jesse Ellman
    611

    This report analyzes contracting for products, services, and research & development (R&D) by the Department of Defense (DoD) and its key components.

  • - Diplomatic, Legal, and Security Dimensions of the Dispute
     
    621

    The South China Sea is arguably one of the world's most dangerous regions, with conflicting diplomatic, legal, and security claims by major and mid-level powers. CSIS brings together an international group of experts to provide a diverse and wide-ranging set of perspectives on the region and to explore possibilities for future cooperation.

  • av Stephanie Sanok Kostro
    517

    This report focuses on the institutional foundations that enable-or, at times, hinder-federated approaches to defense.

  • - Paying a Price
    av Bonnie S. Glaser
    537

    This report highlights challenges to Taiwan's ability to play a more active role in eight areas of international security: counterterrorism, law enforcement, maritime security, nuclear security, transportation security, humanitarian assistance and disaster relief, human security, and cybersecurity.

  • av Murray Hiebert
    607

    Potential sales of billions of dollars of energy equipment produced by U.S. companies are at stake in the major economies of the region. They are expected to import as much as $16 billion worth of energy products over the next few years to power their economic growth. But unless the United States launches new initiatives to snare sizable shares of this investment, U.S. companies are unlikely to be major players in all this trade.

  • - Incurable Ills?
    av Haim Malka
    541

    This report traces the evolution of Hamas's health care services from the movement's origins to its current role as the de facto government of Gaza.

  • - Opportunities for Deepening the Partnership
    av Amer S. Latif
    607

  • - Implications for U.S. Policy
    av Stephen Johnson
    607

    This report examines police reform in the Americas and suggests a strategic approach--considering trends, the threat environment, available resources, institutional strengths and weaknesses, and leadership--that will permit U.S. assistance to be successful.

  • av Stephen Johnson
    687

    "A Report of the CSIS Americas Program In cooperation with The Center for Hemispheric Defense Studies National Defense University."

  • - A Literature Review
    av Mariam Mufti
    687

  • - Mixing Oil and Politics
    av Robert E. Ebel
    651

  • - Looking Back, Looking Forward
    av Robert E. Ebel
    607

    "A report of the CSIS Energy and National Security Program."

  • - A Report of the CSIS Commission on China
    av Carola McGiffert
    541

  • - Reinventing Partnership
    av Teresita C. Schaffer
    791

  • - Competition and Cooperation in the Developing World
     
    717

  • - Force Developments in the Maghreb
    av Anthony H. Cordesman
    687

  • - China, the United States, and the Middle East
    av Jon B. Alterman
    751

    This volume explores the complex interrelationships among China, the United States, and the Middle East--what the authors call the "vital triangle." There is surely much to be gained from continuing the conventional two-dimensional analysis--China and the United States, the United States and the Middle East, and China and the Middle East. Such scholarship has a long history and no doubt a long future. But it is the three-dimensional equation--which seeks to understand the effects of the China-Middle East relationship on the United States, the U.S.-Middle East relationship on China, and the Sino-American relationship on the Middle East--that draws the authors' attention. This approach captures the true dynamics of change in world affairs and the spiraling up and down of national interests. Central to this analysis is a belief that if any one of the three sides of this triangular relationship is unhappy, it has the power to make the other two unhappy as well. The stakes and the intimacy of the interrelationship highlight not only the importance of reaching accommodation, but also the potential payoff of agreement on common purpose.

  • - U.S. Innovation in a Vulnerable World
    av Frederick D. Barton
    607

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