RAND's international affairs research comprises a range of cross-cutting issues, including global economies and trade, space and maritime security, diplomacy, global health and education, nation building, and regional security and stability. RAND also analyzes the policies and effectiveness of international organizations such as the UN, NATO, European Union, and ASEAN.
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This Note is the second in a series of six RAND examinations of issues, options, and relevant considerations in the naval dimensions of East-West arms control.
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Explores the implications of changes in the East-West strategic relationship for NATO's southern region.
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A Technical Panel on Electronic Records Management was established to consider how the new technologies could best be used for short-term efficiency of document control as well as long-term preservation of information for legal and historic purposes.
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Uses de-escalation dynamics to examine some military aspects of the broader subject of crisis management as it might be practiced by NATO, and then explores the future role of NATO in European security.
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As background to an understanding of possible burdensharing problems in NATO's fifth decade, this report briefly reviews some of the traditional sources of burdensharing disputes within the Alliance.
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Addresses the implications of political developments and prospects in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union for NATO crisis planning and management.
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Examines U.S. national space policy and military space policy, focusing on the space control debate. It considers the status of space control-related capabilities, such as the antisatellite (ASAT) and national aerospace plane (NASP) programs.
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This paper discusses various arms control proposals that would have major effects on the security of the Pacific Rim. While an effective arms control agreement between NATO and the Soviet Union in Europe could do much to reduce the security problems ...
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Recent progress in European arms reduction is the result of a unique combination of developments not likely to occur in other regions, including Korea. While the potential for meaningful arms control may not seem very promising in the case of Northea...
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Since the division of the Korean peninsula along ideological lines after World War II and the subsequent Korean War of 1950-1953, the restoration of a Korean national community has been a high priority on both sides of the Demilitarized Zone. This pa...
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Develops a conceptual framework for thinking about future NATO policies. It analyzes, individually and interactively, the major variables that seem likely to shape NATO's role over the period 1990-2005.
Research Brief
Parents in Indonesia, Pakistan, and the Philippines typically choose to get more education for their sons than for their daughters. Governments need to increase access to schools and establish incentives and subsidies to increase women’s education.
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One, the reserve option, would create additional NATO forces from the pool of unused or underused European reservists. To assess the feasibility of the reserve option, this study examines one technical and two policy issues:...
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In view of the dramatic changes within the Soviet Union under Mikhail Gorbachev, NATO faces the challenge of coordinating its defense planning with its diplomatic approaches to the Soviet Union.
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Since the late 1970s, Italian policy toward NATO has been characterized by increasing assertiveness, but this has not threatened the basic national commitment to coalition defense and is unlikely to do so in the future.
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Using a number of scenarios, this Note examines variables likely to affect U.S. NATO policy during the first term of the Bush Administration.
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Assesses future West German attitudes toward NATO and the factors that are likely to shape them into the mid-1990s.
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Discusses the postwar course of Danish and Norwegian security policy, addressing the pattern of constraints at work in these countries' security consensuses.
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Argues for a joint monitoring mechanism that would play a crucial part in formulating and implementing Canadian-U.S. policy in the Arctic.
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This paper discusses Mikhail Gorbachev's "peace offensive" and NATO members' perceptions of and reactions to the Soviets' arms reduction policies as they affect the NATO position on disarmament. The author suggests that Soviet unilateral arms reducti...