Case Studies

Historical case studies are an essential element of the study and are intended to inform proposals for reforming US government interagency support for national security activities by identifying trends, recurring issues, challenges, solutions and lesson learning to responses to complex operational demands in the past. The following is a list of case studies conducted under the project. Under the direction of Richard Weitz of the Hudson Institute, these case studies have been selected to illustrate the enduring nature of interagency challenges and to explore how the United States responds to crises that have significant non-military dimensions.


 


 







  Major Reports
  Case Studies
Great Pandemic of 1918
Cold War Public Diplomacy
CORDS and the Vietnam Experience
1964 Alaskan Earthquake
East Timor, 1999
The Interagency, Eisenhower, and the House of Saud
Human Trafficking in the 21st Century
America's Rejection of the Ottawa Treaty
Japan after WWII
Somalia: Did Leaders or the System Fail?
Iran-Contra Affair
U.S. - Central Asian Engagement
Interagency Paralysis: Stagnation in Bosnia and Kosovo
Summary of "U.S.-India Civil Nuclear Cooperation Agreement: A Case Study"
U.S. Interagency Efforts to Combat International Terrorism Through Foreign Capacity Building Programs
Future Defense Industry Scenario
Managing U.S.-China Crises
The NCIX and the National Counterintelligence Mission: What has Worked, What has Not, and Why
Opting for War: An Analysis of the Decision to Invade Iraq
  Literature Reviews
  Articles
  Conference Proceedings
  Case Study Roundtable Series
  Additional Research

 
 
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