Soldiers and Civil Power : Supporting or Substituting Civil Authorities in Modern Peace Operations.
An incisive study of policy issues and practice of the civil-military interface in the twentieth-century military operations from World War II to Kosovo.
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Amsterdam :
Amsterdam University Press,
2005.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Table of Contents; Acknowledgements; Introduction; PART I: THE CIVIL-MILITARY INTERFACE IN TWENTIETH-CENTURY MILITARY OPERATIONS; 1. Substituting the Civil Power: Civil Affairs and Military Government in World War II; 2. Supporting the Civil Power: Counterinsurgency and the Return to Conventional Warfare; PART II: COMPLEX PEACEKEEPING: THE UNITED NATIONS IN CAMBODIA; 3. Making Sense of the Mission: UNTAC's Military and Civil Mandates; 4. The Slippery Slope towards Public Security: Soldiers and Policemen in Cambodia; 5. 'Sanderson's Coup': Militarized Elections amidst Escalating Violence.
- PART III: AMERICAN INTERVENTIONS: SEGREGATING THE CIVIL AND MILITARY SPHERES6. 'Peacekeeping' in a Power Vacuum: The Reluctant American Occupation of Somalia; 7. Securing and Governing Baidoa: Australia's Living Laboratory in Somalia; 8. One Step Forward, Two Steps Back: Widening the Civil-Military Gap in Bosnia; PART IV: KOSOVO: MILITARY GOVERNMENT BY DEFAULT; 9. The Kosovo Force: Entering the Wasteland; 10. The Kosovar Constabulary: The Race between Order and Disorder; 11. Peacekeepers in Pursuit of Justice: Protecting and Prosecuting Serbs in Orahovac.
- 12. The UÇK's Silent Coup: KFOR in the Civil Administrative Vacuum13. The Tools at Hand: Civil-Military Cooperation in Kosovo; Conclusion; Primary Sources and Bibliography; Glossary and Military Terminology; Notes.