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Eroding Trust: The UK's PREVENT…
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Eroding Trust: The UK's PREVENT Counter-Extremism Strategy in Health and Education (edition 2016)

by Amrit Singh (Author), David Berry (Editor)

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The United States needs a new framework for partnering with security forces overseas. Since 9/11, it has spent more than $250 billion building up foreign military and police. But that hasn't always left the United States safer or its partners more stable and capable. From attempts to build whole armies in Iraq and Afghanistan, to efforts to help Yemen or Nigeria fight terrorism, the overall return on investment has been poor. This document sets out immediate, concrete steps the incoming administration can take to make American security sector assistance more accountable to the taxpayer and more effective. That is, to transform it from a confusing and inefficient web of U.S. government actors and interests into a more selective, transparent, goal-driven, and coordinated process that is matched to broader U.S. foreign policy objectives.… (more)
Member:Cumberland_Lodge
Title:Eroding Trust: The UK's PREVENT Counter-Extremism Strategy in Health and Education
Authors:Amrit Singh (Author)
Other authors:David Berry (Editor)
Info:Open Society Foundations
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Eroding Trust: The UK's PREVENT Counter-Extremism Strategy in Health and Education by Amrit Singh

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The United States needs a new framework for partnering with security forces overseas. Since 9/11, it has spent more than $250 billion building up foreign military and police. But that hasn't always left the United States safer or its partners more stable and capable. From attempts to build whole armies in Iraq and Afghanistan, to efforts to help Yemen or Nigeria fight terrorism, the overall return on investment has been poor. This document sets out immediate, concrete steps the incoming administration can take to make American security sector assistance more accountable to the taxpayer and more effective. That is, to transform it from a confusing and inefficient web of U.S. government actors and interests into a more selective, transparent, goal-driven, and coordinated process that is matched to broader U.S. foreign policy objectives.

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