This book identifies some of the main lessons for civil-military
interactions that can be derived from the experiences of Provincial
Reconstruction Teams (PRTs) in Afghanistan.
A key underlying theme of the book is simply that the ways in
which civil and military actors interact in theatres of operations
such as Afghanistan "matter" for both those categories of actors,
and for the ordinary people who their interactions serve. But a
second, equally important, theme is that these interactions are
invariably complex. A third, which arises specifically from the PRT
experience in Afghanistan, is that such teams vary significantly in
their roles, resourcing, and operational environments, so that if
one is seeking to appraise the value of the PRT experience, it is
necessary to unpack with some care the experiences of different
PRTs, which the use of case studies allows one to do.
The volume comprises an introduction, identifying some key
questions to which the PRT experience gives rise, and case studies
of the experiences of the United States, United Kingdom, New
Zealand, Canada, The Netherlands, Australia, Germany and France;
chapters dealing with the roles played by NGOs and the UN system; a
discussion from an Afghan perspective of the implications of
civilian casualties; and a conclusion. It is the combination of the
diverse cases discussed in this book with a focus on the broad
challenges of optimising civil-military interactions that makes
this book distinctive.
This book will be of much interest to students of the Afghan
War, civil-military relations, statebuilding, Central Asian
politics and IR in general."
General
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