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Title What works best when building partner capacity and under what circumstances? / Christopher Paul [and others].

Publication Info. Santa Monica, CA : RAND, 2012.

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Description 1 online resource (xxiv, 101 pages) : illustrations
Note "RAND National Defense Research Institute."
"This research was ... conducted within the International Security and Defense Policy Center of the RAND National Defense Research Institute"--Preface.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 99-101).
Contents Introduction: Find the Right Ladder, Find the Right Rung -- U.S. Department of Defense Efforts to Build Partner Capacity -- Hypotheses and Factors: What Works Best for Building Partner Capacity, and Under What Circumstances? -- Historical Cases and Case Selection -- Analyses and Results -- Conclusions and Recommendations -- Appendix: Subordinate Factors for the Modified DSART BPC Objectives.
Summary The United States has a long history of helping other nations develop and improve their military and other security forces. However, changing economic realities and the ongoing reductions in overall defense spending related to the end of more than a decade of war will affect the funding available for these initiatives. How can the U.S. Department of Defense increase the effectiveness of its efforts to build partner capacity while also increasing the efficiency of those efforts? And what can the history of U.S. efforts to build partner capacity reveal about which approaches are likely to be more or less effective under different circumstances? To tackle these complex questions and form a base of evidence to inform policy discussions and investment decisions, a RAND study collected and compared 20 years of data on 29 historical case studies of U.S. involvement in building partner capacity. In the process, it tested a series of validating factors and hypotheses (many of which are rooted in "common knowledge") to determine how they stand up to real-world case examples of partner capacity building. The results reveal nuances in outcomes and context, pointing to solutions and recommendations to increase the effectiveness of current and future U.S. initiatives to forge better relationships, improve the security and stability of partner countries, and meet U.S. policy and security objectives worldwide.
Note Print version record.
Subject Military assistance, American.
Security Assistance Program.
United States -- Military relations -- Foreign countries.
POLITICAL SCIENCE -- Security (National & International)
Military assistance, American. (OCoLC)fst01020932
Military relations. (OCoLC)fst01353799
Security Assistance Program. (OCoLC)fst01110870
United States. (OCoLC)fst01204155
Added Author Paul, Christopher, 1971-
Clarke, Colin P.
Grill, Beth.
Young, Stephanie.
Moroney, Jennifer D. P., 1973-
Hogler, Joe.
Leah, Christine.
National Defense Research Institute (U.S.)
International Security and Defense Policy Center.
Rand Corporation.
United States. Department of Defense. Office of the Secretary of Defense.
ISBN 9780833083159 (electronic bk.)
0833083155 (electronic bk.)
Report No. RAND/MG-1253/1-OSD
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