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This book outlines the threats from information warfare faced by
the West and analyses the ways it can defend itself. Existing on a
spectrum from communication to indoctrination, information can be
used to undermine trust, amplify emotional resonance, and
reformulate identities. The West is currently experiencing an
information war, and major setbacks have included: 'fake news';
disinformation campaigns; the manipulation of users of social
media; the dissonance of hybrid warfare; and even accusations of
'state capture'. Nevertheless, the West has begun to comprehend the
reality of what is happening, and it is now in a position defend
itself. In this volume, scholars, information practitioners, and
military professionals define this new war and analyse its shape,
scope, and direction. Collectively, they indicate how media
policies, including social media, represent a form of information
strategy, how information has become the 'centre of gravity' of
operations, and why the further exploitation of data (by scale and
content) by adversaries can be anticipated. For the West, being
first with the truth, being skilled in cyber defence, and
demonstrating virtuosity in information management are central to
resilience and success. This book will be of much interest to
students of strategic studies, information warfare, propaganda
studies, cyber-security, and International Relations.
This book offers a multidisciplinary exploration of how climate
change is impacting conflicts, contention, and competition in the
world. The volume examines how climate change is creating and
exacerbating insecurities for millions of people globally, and how
states, inter-governmental bodies, and others are attempting to
meet challenges today and in the near and medium term. It shows
that climate change insecurity is relevant to a battery of security
areas, including warfighting, stabilisation, human security,
influence, and resilience and capacity building. The volume
provides insights into how climate change has and will impact
security at different scales and in different localities, including
national and ethnic tensions, food and water security, resource
competition, mass displacement, and even the recruitment profiles
and operations of violent and extremist organisations. With
contributions from pioneering researchers and practitioners, the
book discusses shifting operational requirements and
responsibilities, and the need for clarity around the size and
shape of capacity gaps. In addition to practitioners and
policy-makers working in these areas, the book will be of
significant interest to researchers and students of defence
studies, peace and conflict studies, climate change and
environmental security, and international relations.
This book offers a multidisciplinary exploration of how climate
change is impacting conflicts, contention, and competition in the
world. The volume examines how climate change is creating and
exacerbating insecurities for millions of people globally, and how
states, inter-governmental bodies, and others are attempting to
meet challenges today and in the near and medium term. It shows
that climate change insecurity is relevant to a battery of security
areas, including warfighting, stabilisation, human security,
influence, and resilience and capacity building. The volume
provides insights into how climate change has and will impact
security at different scales and in different localities, including
national and ethnic tensions, food and water security, resource
competition, mass displacement, and even the recruitment profiles
and operations of violent and extremist organisations. With
contributions from pioneering researchers and practitioners, the
book discusses shifting operational requirements and
responsibilities, and the need for clarity around the size and
shape of capacity gaps. In addition to practitioners and
policy-makers working in these areas, the book will be of
significant interest to researchers and students of defence
studies, peace and conflict studies, climate change and
environmental security, and international relations.
This edited volume offers an in-depth study of heritage and warfare
from the perspective of defence studies. The book focuses on how,
in different contexts, heritage can be a catalyst and target of
conflict, an obstacle to stabilisation, and a driver of
peace-building. It documents the changing role of heritage - in
terms of both exploitation and protection - in various military
capabilities, theatres, and operations. With particular concern for
the areas of subthreshold and hybrid warfare, stabilisation,
cultural relationships, human security, and disaster response, the
volume reviews the historical relationship between heritage and
armed conflict, including the roles of embedded archaeologists,
safeguarding of ethics, and dislodgement and destruction of
material culture. Various chapters in the book also demonstrate the
value of understanding how state and non-state actors exploit
cultural heritage across different defence postures and within both
subthreshold and proxy warfare in order to achieve military,
political, economic, and diplomatic advantages. This book will be
of interest to students of defence studies, heritage studies,
anthropology and security studies in general, as well as military
practitioners.
This book outlines the threats from information warfare faced by
the West and analyses the ways it can defend itself. Existing on a
spectrum from communication to indoctrination, information can be
used to undermine trust, amplify emotional resonance, and
reformulate identities. The West is currently experiencing an
information war, and major setbacks have included: 'fake news';
disinformation campaigns; the manipulation of users of social
media; the dissonance of hybrid warfare; and even accusations of
'state capture'. Nevertheless, the West has begun to comprehend the
reality of what is happening, and it is now in a position defend
itself. In this volume, scholars, information practitioners, and
military professionals define this new war and analyse its shape,
scope, and direction. Collectively, they indicate how media
policies, including social media, represent a form of information
strategy, how information has become the 'centre of gravity' of
operations, and why the further exploitation of data (by scale and
content) by adversaries can be anticipated. For the West, being
first with the truth, being skilled in cyber defence, and
demonstrating virtuosity in information management are central to
resilience and success. This book will be of much interest to
students of strategic studies, information warfare, propaganda
studies, cyber-security, and International Relations.
This book explores the natures of recent stabilisation efforts and
global upstream threats. As prevention is always cheaper than the
crisis of state collapse or civil war, the future character of
conflict will increasingly involve upstream stabilisation
operations. However, the unpredictability and variability of state
instability requires governments and militaries to adopt a
diversity of approach, conceptualisation and vocabulary. Offering
perspectives from theory and practice, the chapters in this
collection provide crucial insight into military roles and
capabilities, opportunities, risks and limitations, doctrine,
strategy and tactics, and measures of effect relevant to operations
in upstream environments. This volume will appeal to researchers
and practitioners seeking to understand historical and current
conflict.
The public's fascination with archaeology has meant that
archaeologists have had to deal with media more regularly than
other scholarly disciplines. How archaeologists communicate their
research to the public through the media and how the media view
archaeologists has become an important feature in the contemporary
world of academic and professional archaeologists. In this volume,
a group of archaeologists, many with media backgrounds, address the
wide range of questions in this intersection of fields. An array of
media forms are covered including television, film, photography,
the popular press, art, video games, radio and digital media with a
focus on the overriding question: What are the long-term
implications of the increasing exposure through and reliance upon
media forms for archaeology in the contemporary world? The volume
will be of interest to archaeologists and those teaching public
archaeology courses.
The public's fascination with archaeology has meant that
archaeologists have had to deal with media more regularly than
other scholarly disciplines. How archaeologists communicate their
research to the public through the media and how the media view
archaeologists has become an important feature in the contemporary
world of academic and professional archaeologists. In this volume,
a group of archaeologists, many with media backgrounds, address the
wide range of questions in this intersection of fields. An array of
media forms are covered including television, film, photography,
the popular press, art, video games, radio and digital media with a
focus on the overriding question: What are the long-term
implications of the increasing exposure through and reliance upon
media forms for archaeology in the contemporary world? The volume
will be of interest to archaeologists and those teaching public
archaeology courses.
This book explores the natures of recent stabilisation efforts and
global upstream threats. As prevention is always cheaper than the
crisis of state collapse or civil war, the future character of
conflict will increasingly involve upstream stabilisation
operations. However, the unpredictability and variability of state
instability requires governments and militaries to adopt a
diversity of approach, conceptualisation and vocabulary. Offering
perspectives from theory and practice, the chapters in this
collection provide crucial insight into military roles and
capabilities, opportunities, risks and limitations, doctrine,
strategy and tactics, and measures of effect relevant to operations
in upstream environments. This volume will appeal to researchers
and practitioners seeking to understand historical and current
conflict.
No modern intervention is intended to endure indefinitely; indeed
some fashion of exit is always envisioned from the outset. This
commitment to an exit is normally informed by an exit strategy.
Whilst strategies of closure have been scrutinised recently, not
least in light of charges of defective intentions and planning, the
relations between the strategies, operations and tactics of exit
have not been contextualised. Focus on the local, specific and
bottom-up manifestations of transitions offers significant enhances
to historical, theoretical and applied understandings. This book is
an introduction not just to the issues of transition, handover and
withdrawal, but to exit as a package of theoretical concepts and
how these have been understood, shaped and employed in historic and
contemporary perspective. Drawing on a wide range of post-1945
examples derived from a variety of regions and periods, At the End
of Military Intervention provides researchers and practitioners
with a source book on what forms a crucial and often overlooked
element of past and present interventions.
War and its legacy are traumatic to individuals, communities, and
landscapes. The impacts last long beyond the events themselves and
shape lives and generations. Archaeology has a part to play in the
recording of, and recovery from, such trauma. The Falklands War
Mapping Project delivers the first intensive archaeological survey
of the battlefields of the Falklands War. The project is pioneering
in its inclusion of military veterans as part of the core team and
unique in being the first to take veterans back to the battlefields
on which they fought. Forty years after the events of 1982, the
project provides a detailed assessment of the character, location,
and condition of structural features and artefacts. The project
also develops understandings of the role played by conflict
heritage - and of landscapes, finds, and past events - in the
recall of personal and collective memories. This sumptuously
illustrated book brings together the perspectives of team members,
institutional partners and others. It showcases the varied and
important contributions archaeology can make beyond understandings
of distant events linked to therapeutic progress, coming to terms
with traumatic experiences, living with the past in the present,
and forging new memories, relations, and futures.
Archaeologies of Cultural Contact undertakes an exploration of
cultural transfer, with a particular focus on the combination and
modification of both material and behavioural attributes under
conditions of contact. From globalization and displacement to
cultural legitimization and identity politics, the modern world is
characterised by, and articulated through, dynamics of contact and
transfer. This book recognises that creolization, ethnogenesis,
hybridity, and syncretism are analytical concepts and social
processes, relevant not only to the postcolonial contexts of the
twentieth century but also to wide-ranging instances where contact
is made between cultural groups. Indeed, in representing the
re-working of pre-existing cultural elements, they were crucial and
ever-present features of the human past. Ranging in their
analytical frame, scale, and geographical and temporal location,
the chapters in this volume demonstrate the diverse understandings
that can be gained from explorations into the material remains of
past contact, exposing and overcoming various limitations of
competing models of cultural change. They permit insights into not
only cultural change and difference but also the processes of
appropriation, resistance, redefinition, and incorporation.
Together, the contributions articulate the perspectives that
concern practices in relations to people, places, and things, and
note how power dynamics mediate social interactions and sustain and
constrain forms of cultural contact. This book will be of interest
to researchers and students in archaeology as well those from
cognate disciplines, particularly anthropology and history.
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