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The present work will discuss relevant theoretical frameworks and
applications pertaining to enabling resilience within the risk,
crisis and disaster management domain. The contributions to this
book focus on resilience thinking along 4 broad themes: Urban
Domain; Cyber Domain; Organizational/Social domain; and
Socio-ecological domain. This book would serve as a valuable
reference for courses on risk, crisis and disaster management,
international development, social innovation and resilience. This
will be of particular interest to those working in the risk, crisis
and disaster management domain as it will provide valuable insights
into enabling resilience. This book will be well positioned to
inform disaster management professionals, policy makers and
academics on strategies and perspectives regarding disaster
resilience.
For millennia, humans waged war on land and sea. The 20th century
opened the skies and the stars, introducing air and space as
warfare domains. Now, the 21st century has revealed perhaps the
most insidious domain of all: cyberspace, the fifth domain. A realm
free of physical boundaries, cyberspace lies at the intersection of
technology and psychology, where one cannot see one's enemy, and
the most potent weapon is information. The third book in the Great
Power Competition series, Cyberspace: The Fifth Domain, explores
the emergence of cyberspace as a vector for espionage, sabotage,
crime, and war. It examines how cyberspace rapidly evolved from a
novelty to a weapon capable of influencing global economics and
overthrowing regimes, wielded by nation-states and religious
ideologies to stunning effect. Cyberspace: The Fifth Domain offers
a candid look at the United States' role in cyberspace, offering
realistic prescriptions for responding to international cyber
threats on the tactical, strategic, and doctrinal levels, answering
the questions of how can we respond to these threats versus how
should we respond? What are the obstacles to and consequences of
strategic and tactical response options? What technological
solutions are on the horizon? Should the U.S. adopt a more
multi-domain offensive posture that eschews the dominant "cyber vs.
cyber" paradigm? To answer these questions, experts examine the
technological threats to critical infrastructure; cyber operations
strategy, tactics, and doctrine; information influence operations;
the weaponization of social media; and much more.
Lessons Learned from Afghanistan: America's Longest War examines
the lessons of how America's "longest war" came to an ignominious
end with staggering consequences for the United States and the
Afghan nation. Afghanistan today faces an unprecedented
humanitarian crisis, looming threat of a civil war and a resurgence
of violent extremism organizations similar to pre-9/11. As the U.S.
enters a new era in the strategic geopolitical Great Power
Competition, an analysis of the original mission intent, shifting
policy and strategic objectives, and ineffective implementation of
security, political and economic programs reveal critical lessons
and questions such as: What led to the "strategic failure" of the
U.S. in Afghanistan? What decisions resulted in the present-day
humanitarian, civil, and political crises in Afghanistan? Were
these consequences in fact avoidable? Was there an alternative
approach that could have maintained the hard-fought gains of the
last two decades, and better demonstrated America's standing as a
defender of global human rights? Lessons Learned from Afghanistan:
America's Longest War further explores lessons of the past
negotiations between the United States, Taliban, and former U.S.
backed Afghan government to suggest alternative pathways that honor
the original intent of the mission and meet present-day obligations
to an Afghan nation in crisis.
This book explores types of disruptions in defence and security,
ways to assess disruptions triggered by technological advancements
or the lack of legal frameworks; the consequent delays or
disruptions to making decisions, creative idea generation and
finally the innovative pathways to counter such disruptions. What
do disruption, ideation and innovation have in common? How do
disruptions, ideas and innovation coexist within defence and
security? They all influence and impact decision-making.
Disruptions drive decision-making. Ideation raises solutions to
resolve the disruptions and innovation brings ideas into life.
While disruptions may be common place in the business world, where
disruptive technologies displace pre-existing ones; they are less
prevalent in defence, even less so within the realm of security.
For the last 10 years, there has been talk of disruptive
technologies and even adoption of terms such as emerging and
disruptive technologies by the largest military alliance-NATO, yet
the means to assess these remain elusive. It offers researchers
opportunities to assess different types of disruptions, ideate and
innovate on scientific grounds to counter disruptions, thereby
bolstering the defence and security community's ability to make
decisions better.
The present work will discuss relevant theoretical frameworks and
applications pertaining to enabling resilience within the risk,
crisis and disaster management domain. The contributions to this
book focus on resilience thinking along 4 broad themes: Urban
Domain; Cyber Domain; Organizational/Social domain; and
Socio-ecological domain. This book would serve as a valuable
reference for courses on risk, crisis and disaster management,
international development, social innovation and resilience. This
will be of particular interest to those working in the risk, crisis
and disaster management domain as it will provide valuable insights
into enabling resilience. This book will be well positioned to
inform disaster management professionals, policy makers and
academics on strategies and perspectives regarding disaster
resilience.
Even before the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic, the Central
Region faced numerous obstacles to building a stable and prosperous
future. The region, which encompasses the Middle East, the Horn of
Africa, Central Asia, and South Asia, has been plagued by economic
and political uncertainty amidst dramatic shifts in the global
power structure. With the pandemic now exacerbating the volatility
in this already fragile region, the U.S.'s strategic objectives are
rife for re-examination. A complicated stew of factors such as
weakening of established governance systems, the emboldening of
extremist individuals and groups through advances in digital
technology, the humanitarian crises in Afghanistan and Syria, and
the intensification of the great power competition with China and
Russia are creating a fertile environment for the growth of violent
extremist organizations (VEOs). Such organizations take advantage
of vulnerable, aggrieved, and traumatized populations to fuel
radicalization, recruitment, and unrest, which further undermine
stability and the potential for peace and prosperity. While it is
still early to fully understand how the ongoing response to the
COVID-19 pandemic will impact U.S. policy, this book provides a
timely analysis of relevant dynamics such as popular
radicalization, digital information ecosystems, networks of
influence, and new capabilities to recognize and prepare for other
such black swan events in the region.
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