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  • - The Last Year of Growth?
    av Mark F. Cancian
    519

    CSIS's Mark Cancian analyzes the U.S. military forces in FY 2021, their composition, new initiatives, long-term trends, and challenges, as the United States' military forces likely entered their last year of growth.

  • av Seth G. Jones
    519

    The U.S. defense industrial base is not prepared for the international security environment that now exists, including to deal with China. The United States should take several steps now to strengthen the industrial base to improve deterrence and warfighting.

  • av Heather A. Conley & Donatienne Ruy
    549,-

  • av Rhys McCormick
    500,99

    This report examines trends in Other Transaction Authority (OTA) usage across the DoD to provide insights into how the DoD is using OTAs to pursue innovation, how DoD spending under an OTA is organized, and to whom the majority of OTA obligations go.

  • av Seamus P. Daniels
    505

    There are growing calls for a decrease in the United States' military presence in the Middle East. This new CSIS report assesses posture options in the context of Chinese, Russian, Iranian, and other threats in the region.

  • av Reja Younis
    809

    These papers explore a range of crucial debates such as the future of arms control and deterrence, emerging technologies, SSBN vulnerability, public opinion, cyber norms, and the role of regional dynamics including China and India in nuclear security.

  • - The Global Expansion of Russia's Private Military Companies
    av Seth G. Jones
    575

    The CSIS Transnational Threats Project analyzes Russia's increasing use of private military companies as a means to expand its influence, extract resources, and build the capacity of partners and allies through deniable, irregular means.

  • - Protecting Space Systems from Counterspace Weapons
    av Todd Harrison
    525

    This analysis from the CSIS Aerospace Security Project addresses different methods and technologies that can be used by the United States government, and others, to protect against or deter adversarial attacks via counterspace weapons.

  • - A Collection of Papers from the Next Generation
     
    489

    The authors featured in this CSIS publication were members of The Project on Nuclear Issues' (PONI) 2020 Nuclear Scholars Class. The PONI Nuclear Scholars Initiative is a select group of rising next-gen voices, comprised of graduate students and young professionals.

  • - The Evolution of Norms and Power in Modern Asia
    av Michael J. Green
    525

    This collection of essays addresses the interplay of democratic norms and cultural identity within Asia. The overall question for the volume is how the dueling identities of Asianism (regional exceptionalism) and universalism (democratic norms) are shaping state discourse and behavior in Asia.

  • - Communicating the Rationale for the Role and Value of U.S. Nuclear Weapons, 1989 to Today
    av Rebecca K.C. Hersman
    609,-

    This report tracks the changing conceptual and political landscape of U.S. nuclear deterrence to illuminate the gap in prioritizing the nuclear arsenal and to build a compelling rationale for tactical personnel explaining the role and value of U.S. nuclear weapons.

  • - Crisis and Opportunity
     
    719,-

    Maintaining international security and pursuing American interests is more difficult now than perhaps at any time in history. The security environment that the United States faces is more complex, dynamic, and difficult to predict. At the same time, no domestic consensus exists on the purposes of American power and how best to pursue them. The Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) will look ahead in this annual volume at the "flashpoints" that will likely arise in 2015, how best to deal with them, and what lasting effects they might leave for the next American administration and its allies around the world.

  • av Robert D. Lamb
    565,-

    Most violent conflicts since the turn of this century were in countries that had experienced an earlier violent conflict. How can we tell when a country is likely to remain stuck in a cycle of violence? What factors suggest it might be "ripe" for stabilizing and peace building?

  • av Sadika Hameed
    589

    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.

  • - Strategy and Responses
    av Jenny Jun
    679,-

    This report presents an open source analysis of North Korea's cyber operations capabilities and its strategic implications for the United States and South Korea. The purpose is to mitigate the current knowledge gap among various academic and policy communities on the topic by synthesizing authoritative and comprehensive open source reference material.

  • - A Survey of Regional Expectations
    av Michael J. Green
    575

    This report presents key findings on the strategic landscape in Asia with respect to questions of power, norms, and regional institutions.

  • - Sanctions, Energy, Arms Control, and Regime Change
    av Anthony H. Cordesman
    965

    This report analyzes four key aspects of US and Iranian strategic competition--sanctions, energy, arms control, and regime change. Its primary focus is on the ways in which the sanctions applied to Iran have changed US and Iranian competition since the fall of 2011.

  • - Competition and Cooperation in the Developing World
     
    715

  • - An Evolving Landscape of Regulatory Progress and Retreat
    av Judith A. Chambers
    785,-

    This report outlines the status of biotechnology regulatory structures in Kenya, Tanzania, and Uganda, with a focus on regulation of genetically modified (GM) crops. Effective regulatory structures are important for the approval and use of agricultural technology.

  • - Escalation and Conflict in U.S.-China Economic Relations
    av Matthew P. Goodman
    645,-

    An effort to model U.S.-China economic conflict finds that Washington and Beijing are set on a path of continued escalation. The report makes recommendations for U.S. policymakers seeking to engage in successful economic bargaining with China.

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