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  • UK General Election 2019: Time for a New Approach to Security Partnerships?

    UK General Election 2019: Time for a New Approach to Security Partnerships?

    This general election is an opportunity for UK political parties to commit to a review of the UK’s approach to security partnerships to ensure that they are consistent with UK strategic objectives to reduce conflict and build peace abroad. Read more

  • WarPod Ep #7 | Drones, A.I., and Sci-Fi

    WarPod Ep #7 | Drones, A.I., and Sci-Fi

    Ulrike Franke discusses drones, artificial intelligence, the future of technology in warfare, and the insights that can be gained from studying the portrayal of drones in science fiction. Read more

  • WarPod Episode #6 | Views from Inside Westminster

    WarPod Episode #6 | Views from Inside Westminster

    Liam Walpole is joined, on location at Portcullis House, by three past and present parliamentary researchers to discuss the future of UK defence and foreign policy. Read more

  • Cycles of Violence: To Afghanistan and Back

    Cycles of Violence: To Afghanistan and Back

    As the United States seeks to end its 18-year war in Afghanistan through negotiations with the Taliban, this briefing revisits how Washington and the Western coalition have responded to the 9/11 attacks and stoked the cycle of violence that has empowered al-Qaida, Islamic State and other extreme, anti-Western groups. Read more

  • UK General Election 2019: Time for a New Approach to Security Partnerships?
  • WarPod Ep #7 | Drones, A.I., and Sci-Fi
  • WarPod Episode #6 | Views from Inside Westminster
  • Cycles of Violence: To Afghanistan and Back
  • Next
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  1. Research & analysis
  2. Defence
  3. Policy and doctrine

Policy and Doctrine

UK General Election 2019: Time for a New Approach to Security Partnerships?

UK General Election 2019: Time for a New Approach to Security Partnerships?

This general election is an opportunity for UK political parties to commit to a review of the UK’s approach to security partnerships to ensure that they are consistent with UK strategic objectives to reduce conflict and build peace abroad. Read more

Published: 10th December, 2019

Author: Alasdair McKay

Related topics:
  • Policy and Doctrine
  • The Remote Warfare Programme
Infographics: Fusion Doctrine in Five Steps

Infographics: Fusion Doctrine in Five Steps

ORG's research on Fusion Doctrine in Africa summarised in infographics. Read more

Published: 5th November, 2019

Updated: 2nd March, 2020

Author: Alasdair McKay

Related topics:
  • Policy and Doctrine
  • The Remote Warfare Programme
  • Africa
  • Sahel - Sahara
  • Fusion Doctrine in Five Steps
WarPod Ep #7 | Drones, A.I., and Sci-Fi

WarPod Ep #7 | Drones, A.I., and Sci-Fi

Ulrike Franke discusses drones, artificial intelligence, the future of technology in warfare, and the insights that can be gained from studying the portrayal of drones in science fiction. Read more

Published: 14th October, 2019

Updated: 15th October, 2019

Author: Alasdair McKay

Related topics:
  • Non-state armed groups
  • Policy and Doctrine
  • The Remote Warfare Programme
  • Operations
  • Podcasts
WarPod Episode #6 | Views from Inside Westminster

WarPod Episode #6 | Views from Inside Westminster

Liam Walpole is joined, on location at Portcullis House, by three past and present parliamentary researchers to discuss the future of UK defence and foreign policy. Read more

Published: 16th September, 2019

Updated: 20th November, 2019

Author: Alasdair McKay

Related topics:
  • Policy and Doctrine
  • The Remote Warfare Programme
  • Podcasts
Cycles of Violence: To Afghanistan and Back

Cycles of Violence: To Afghanistan and Back

As the United States seeks to end its 18-year war in Afghanistan through negotiations with the Taliban, this briefing revisits how Washington and the Western coalition have responded to the 9/11 attacks and stoked the cycle of violence that has empowered al-Qaida, Islamic State and other extreme, anti-Western groups. Read more

Published: 29th August, 2019

Updated: 9th December, 2019

Author: Alasdair McKay

Related topics:
  • Asia
  • Non-state armed groups
  • Paul Rogers' Briefings
  • Policy and Doctrine
  • Sustainable Security Programme
WarPod Ep #5 : Covert Action and Accountability

WarPod Ep #5 : Covert Action and Accountability

RWP are joined by Dr. Jamie Gaskarth from the University of Birmingham to discuss the accountability of the more secretive elements of the UK security services. Read more

Published: 15th August, 2019

Updated: 18th September, 2019

Author: Alasdair McKay

Related topics:
  • Policy and Doctrine
  • The Remote Warfare Programme
  • Podcasts
Remote Warfare and the Practical Challenges for the Protection of Civilians Strategy

Remote Warfare and the Practical Challenges for the Protection of Civilians Strategy

This briefing explores the strategic consequences of remote warfare for Protection of Civilians (POC) and outlines practical lessons the British armed forces can draw from contemporary theatres to improve its capacity for POC in partnered operations. Read more

Published: 10th June, 2019

Updated: 18th July, 2019

Author: Alasdair McKay

Related topics:
  • Policy and Doctrine
  • The Remote Warfare Programme
  • Operations
Westminster Round-Up Podcast | May 2019

Westminster Round-Up Podcast | May 2019

The Remote Warfare Programme's Liam Walpole and Megan Karlshoej-Pedersen discuss the latest developments in UK defence and security policy. Read more

Published: 28th May, 2019

Updated: 19th June, 2019

Author: Alasdair McKay

Related topics:
  • Policy and Doctrine
  • The Remote Warfare Programme
  • Podcasts
Iraq After Islamic State: Divided We Stand?

Iraq After Islamic State: Divided We Stand?

This briefing examines how choices made throughout the anti-IS campaign have contributed to several of the factors that are currently destabilising the Iraqi security sector. Read more

Published: 17th December, 2018

Updated: 23rd August, 2019

Author: Alasdair McKay

Related topics:
  • Non-state armed groups
  • Policy and Doctrine
  • The Remote Warfare Programme
No Such Thing as a Quick Fix: The Aspiration-Capabilities Gap in British Remote Warfare

No Such Thing as a Quick Fix: The Aspiration-Capabilities Gap in British Remote Warfare

This report is a first attempt to evaluate the gaps between contemporary strategies and activities in Iraq, Syria and Libya. Read more

Published: 30th July, 2018

Updated: 6th March, 2019

Author: Alasdair McKay

Related topics:
  • Policy and Doctrine
  • The Remote Warfare Programme
  • Remote War: Military, Legal and Political Issues
  • Operations
  • Middle East
  • Africa
Remote Warfare: Lessons Learned from Contemporary Theatres

Remote Warfare: Lessons Learned from Contemporary Theatres

This report is a first attempt to identify some of the factors that have helped or hindered the UK’s current approach to remote warfare. Read more

Published: 27th June, 2018

Updated: 16th September, 2019

Author: Alasdair McKay

Related topics:
  • Policy and Doctrine
  • The Remote Warfare Programme
  • Remote War: Military, Legal and Political Issues
  • Operations
Out from the shadows: the case for external oversight of UK Special Forces

Out from the shadows: the case for external oversight of UK Special Forces

By downplaying the benefits of opening UKSF to external scrutiny, the UK government places itself at a strategic disadvantage that devalues lessons learned exercises that could otherwise be incorporated into improving future military effectiveness. Read more

Published: 5th June, 2018

Updated: 19th June, 2018

Author: Alasdair McKay

Related topics:
  • Policy and Doctrine
  • The Remote Warfare Programme
  • Operations
Pacifism or Pragmatism? The 2013 Parliamentary Vote on Military Action in Syria

Pacifism or Pragmatism? The 2013 Parliamentary Vote on Military Action in Syria

Several commentators have argued that the 2013 Syria vote was a marker of parliamentary pacifism and a symbol of the perils of democratising the decision to use force. This briefing uses the transcript of the debate and recent interviews to assess the validity of these claims. Read more

Published: 29th May, 2018

Updated: 26th July, 2019

Author: Alasdair McKay

Related topics:
  • Policy and Doctrine
  • The Remote Warfare Programme
Trump and Bolton: Making a Greater American Century?

Trump and Bolton: Making a Greater American Century?

The last month has seen dramatic upheavals among the key personnel within the Trump administration tasked with advising the president on foreign affairs and national security policy. Trump has sought a wider range of policy options on Iran and North Korea and he is now likely to get them from a more hawkish team, increasing the possibility of new US regime change operations. This briefing compares current events to the rise of the Neo-Conservative agenda in 1997-2002. Read more

Published: 28th March, 2018

Updated: 1st June, 2018

Author: Alasdair McKay

Related topics:
  • Paul Rogers' Briefings
  • Policy and Doctrine
  • Sustainable Security Programme
  • Nuclear weapons
The Invasion of Iraq Fifteen Years On

The Invasion of Iraq Fifteen Years On

20 March 2018 will mark the 15th anniversary of the invasion of Iraq. Despite President Trump’s confident assertions that the Islamic State is defeated there and in Syria, if ORG’s predictions from before that invasion continue to hold true, we may be only half-way through a generational struggle. Indeed, dispersal of combatants from Iraq and Syria means that this is becoming an increasingly globalised war in which the West is ill-equipped to prevail. Read more

Published: 28th February, 2018

Updated: 29th May, 2018

Author: Alasdair McKay

Related topics:
  • Non-state armed groups
  • Policy and Doctrine
  • Sustainable Security Programme
  • Middle East
Nuclear Posture Review: Sliding Towards Nuclear War?

Nuclear Posture Review: Sliding Towards Nuclear War?

North Korea and Russia may be the focus of contemporary Western fears of imminent nuclear-armed conflict but development and deployment of “useable” nuclear weapons has been a constant throughout the atomic age and by all nuclear-armed states. Read more

Published: 31st January, 2018

Updated: 29th October, 2020

Author: Alasdair McKay

Related topics:
  • Paul Rogers' Briefings
  • Policy and Doctrine
  • Sustainable Security Programme
  • Nuclear weapons
Defining Remote Warfare: Cyber

Defining Remote Warfare: Cyber

This is the second briefing in a series by the Remote Warfare Programme which will bring together experts to discuss important aspects of remote warfare to provide some conceptual clarity.This briefing by VERTIC attends to cyberwar, a subject that has grabbed the attention, and imagination, of publics, media, civil society and academics alike. Read more

Published: 29th January, 2018

Updated: 3rd July, 2018

Author: Alasdair McKay

Related topics:
  • Conceptual Series: Defining Remote Warfare
  • Policy and Doctrine
  • The Remote Warfare Programme
Mind the Gap: Parliament in the Age of Remote Warfare

Mind the Gap: Parliament in the Age of Remote Warfare

This briefing by Liam Walpole explores the origins of the War Powers Convention and parliament’s role in scrutinising the UK government’s use of lethal force over the last decade. Read more

Published: 31st October, 2017

Updated: 1st June, 2018

Author: Alasdair McKay

Related topics:
  • Policy and Doctrine
  • The Remote Warfare Programme
After the Fall: Views from the ground of international military intervention in post-Gadhafi Libya

After the Fall: Views from the ground of international military intervention in post-Gadhafi Libya

This report by Libya specialist Alison Pargeter elicits Libyan views on international operations in Libya and analyses the possible effects of such operations on Libya's longer-term stability. Through interviews with a diverse section of Libyan society, the research paints a detailed picture of how international intervention, both covert and overt, is perceived by Libyans Read more

Published: 31st July, 2017

Updated: 26th June, 2018

Author: Alasdair McKay

Related topics:
  • Policy and Doctrine
  • The Remote Warfare Programme
  • Africa
Towards a New Consensus on National Security

Towards a New Consensus on National Security

As the UK commences negotiations on leaving the EU, juggles challenges to its own union, confronts a new wave of DIY terrorist attacks, and launches Europe’s largest ever warship, the need for a “strategic” National Security Strategy has never been greater. Read more

Published: 29th June, 2017

Updated: 1st June, 2018

Author: Alasdair McKay

Related topics:
  • Policy and Doctrine
  • Sustainable Security Programme
  • Europe and NATO
Hans Blix: Trump's Missile Attack Motivated By Domestic Politics

Hans Blix: Trump's Missile Attack Motivated By Domestic Politics

It is possible that the Trump administration's signal of readiness to tolerate Assad encouraged the Syrian government to barge ahead for more military gain and to use gas against its own citizens. Read more

Published: 12th April, 2017

Updated: 19th June, 2018

Author: Alasdair McKay

Related topics:
  • Non-state armed groups
  • Policy and Doctrine
  • Middle East
All quiet on the ISIS front? British secret warfare in an information age

All quiet on the ISIS front? British secret warfare in an information age

Remote Control’s latest report tracks the UK’s secretive but growing military commitments abroad by analysing the rise in the use of drones for targeted killing, the use of Special Forces, and the provision of capabilities such as intelligence and embedded troops to allied forces. Read more

Published: 30th March, 2017

Updated: 22nd June, 2018

Author: Alasdair McKay

Related topics:
  • Non-state armed groups
  • Policy and Doctrine
  • The Remote Warfare Programme
  • Operations
The UK and the Terror Threat

The UK and the Terror Threat

The recent statement from the UK’s new Independent Reviewer of Terrorism Legislation that the terrorist threat to the country is at its highest level since the 1970s raises at least three crucial questions that this briefing seeks to answer. Read more

Published: 28th February, 2017

Updated: 30th August, 2018

Author: Alasdair McKay

Related topics:
  • Paul Rogers' Briefings
  • Policy and Doctrine
Special Measures: Donald Trump and Trans-Atlantic Relations

Special Measures: Donald Trump and Trans-Atlantic Relations

The first part of this briefing will expand on two good reasons why it is in the interests of the UK government and people to embark upon a full assessment of its central relationship with the US under a Trump presidency. Read more

Published: 20th January, 2017

Updated: 10th July, 2018

Author: Alasdair McKay

Related topics:
  • Policy and Doctrine
  • Sustainable Security Programme
Load more Back to top

Showing 10 of 28

Latest

  • Security in the DRC and Yemen: Military Conflict, Disease Outbreak and Containment

    Security in the DRC and Yemen: Military Conflict, Disease Outbreak and Containment

    This briefing examines the effect of military conflict on the response (and vice versa) to Ebola and COVID-19 in DRC and Yemen, respectively.

  • Mistrust, Misinformation and Community Engagement: Reflections on lessons from the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Yemen

    Mistrust, Misinformation and Community Engagement: Reflections on lessons from the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Yemen

    This briefing examines the mistrust, misinformation and community engagement during the Ebola and COVID-19 outbreaks in the DRC and Yemen, respectively.

  • Women’s Experiences of Disease Outbreaks in Conflict: Reflections on lessons from the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Yemen

    Women’s Experiences of Disease Outbreaks in Conflict: Reflections on lessons from the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Yemen

    This briefing will explore the challenges facing women and girls in each of these contexts. It will first examine the response of the international community in the DRC, and identify key challenges to Congolese women.

  • Background Briefing - Military Conflict, Disease Outbreak and Containment: A Comparative Study of Yemen and DRC

    Background Briefing - Military Conflict, Disease Outbreak and Containment: A Comparative Study of Yemen and DRC

    This is the first briefing in a series released by the Oxford Research Group’s (ORG) Strategic Peacebuilding Programme. These briefings examine the lessons that can be drawn from the response to Ebola in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and how they can be applied in the response to COVID-19 in Yemen.

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  • The Role of Youth in Peacebuilding: Challenges and Opportunities

    The Role of Youth in Peacebuilding: Challenges and Opportunities

    Young people are frequently ‘othered’ in discussions about conflict. This is a dangerous practice as youths can play a very positive role aiding peacebuilding in societies recovering from conflict.

  • Making Bad Economies: The Poverty of Mexican Drug Cartels

    Making Bad Economies: The Poverty of Mexican Drug Cartels

    Some stories say that local economies benefit from cartels in Mexico. But research suggests that the areas most plagued by drug-related violence have seriously suffered economically.

  • ORG's Vision

    Oxford Research Group (ORG) is an independent organisation that has been influential for for nearly four decades in pioneering new, more strategic approaches to security and peacebuilding. Based in London since 2006, ORG continues to pursue cutting edge research and advocacy in the United Kingdom and abroad while managing innovative peacebuilding projects in several Middle Eastern countries.

  • Remote Warfare: Lessons Learned from Contemporary Theatres

    Remote Warfare: Lessons Learned from Contemporary Theatres

    This report is a first attempt to identify some of the factors that have helped or hindered the UK’s current approach to remote warfare.

  • Weavers of Peace: The Higaonon Tribe in the Philippines

    Weavers of Peace: The Higaonon Tribe in the Philippines

    The Higaonon, an indigenous tribe in Northern Mindanao in the southern Philippines, have preserved an ancient system of conflict resolution which has enabled them to be a truly peaceful community. However, there is a need to ensure that this knowledge is not lost in the future.

  • The Cyprus Problem: Why Solve a Comfortable Conflict?

    The Cyprus Problem: Why Solve a Comfortable Conflict?

    Several diplomatic efforts have been made both domestically and internationally to enhance peaceful unity since the start of the Cyprus Problem. Despite the shortcomings of past efforts, it is still desirable not only to resolve the issue, but also to do so in a timely manner.

  • Why Does UN Humanitarian Intervention Remain Selective?

    Why Does UN Humanitarian Intervention Remain Selective?

    Over the past two decades, the United Nations Security Council has responded more strongly to some humanitarian crises than to others. This variation in Security Council action raises the important question of what factors motivate United Nations intervention.

  • The UK and UN Peace Operations: A Case for Greater Engagement

    The UK and UN Peace Operations: A Case for Greater Engagement

    This report supports an enhanced role for Britain in UN peace operations and sets out a case for greater engagement.

  • The Politics of Coltan: An Interview with Michael Nest

    The Politics of Coltan: An Interview with Michael Nest

    In this interview, Dr. Michael Nest discusses the political, environmental, ethical and social issues surrounding the mining of columbite–tantalite (coltan).

  • The Expanding Role of Chinese Peacekeeping in Africa

    The Expanding Role of Chinese Peacekeeping in Africa

    China's increased involvement in United Nations (UN) peacekeeping in Africa reflects a broader trend of the country taking a more proactive approach to foreign policy.

Tag cloud

Accoutability Africa Al-Shabaab AMISOM Peacebuilding Peacekeeping Responsibility to Protect Somalia Special Forces Special Forces oversight Special Operations Forces Transparency UNISOM Yemen

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