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Publications
RUSI publications offer rigorous, timely and policy-relevant analysis of UK and international defence and security issues

Lessons Learned from Preventing and Countering Violent Extremism in the Western Balkans
RUSI Newsbrief, 9 April 2021Eric Rosand and Eric Manton
The Western Balkans provides useful lessons for improving ‘whole of society’ approaches for addressing extremist violence, including how governments and civil society organisations in the region as well as international partners can bolster them.
Tags: Europe
Eyes in the Sky: Space and the Defence Command Paper
RUSI Defence Systems, 30 March 2021Alexandra Stickings
The bigger role played by space comes as no surprise given increased government focus on the domain in recent years. However, a lack of detail still leaves some questions unanswered.
Tags: Aerospace
Avoiding the Terrorist Trap: Why Respect for Human Rights is the Key to Defeating Terrorism
RUSI Journal, 29 March 2021Georgia Holmer
Georgia Holmer reviews Avoiding the Terrorist Trap: Why Respect for Human Rights is the Key to Defeating Terrorism, by Tom Parker.
Tags: Law and Ethics, Terrorism
Talent in a Competitive Age – Searching for a Solution
RUSI Defence Systems, 26 March 2021Paul O'Neill
While the changing character of war is writ large in the Defence Command Paper, its enduring nature is not; war remains a human endeavour. In a competitive age, Defence’s preparedness to win the war for talent remains uncertain.
Tags:
The Promise and Peril of Russia’s Northern Sea Route
RUSI Newsbrief, 26 March 2021Elizabeth Buchanan
The blockage of the Suez Canal has underscored once more the urgency of diversifying global maritime trade routes. While the Arctic’s Northern Sea Route is often held up as an alternative, it is more likely that the two routes will end up coexisting without undercutting each other.
Tags: Russia, Global Security Issues
The Integrated Review: Technology, Not People, Is the UK’s Finest Asset
RUSI Defence Systems, 25 March 2021Andrew Young
The Defence Command Paper has bet big that technology will deliver the war-winning edge for the Armed Forces. It has done so without addressing the elephant in the room – personnel.
Tags:
Major Theatre War: Russia Attacks the Baltic States
RUSI Journal, 25 March 2021R D Hooker Jr
A hypothetical article on a future conflict takes stock of how NATO lost the Baltic states and the implications for the Alliance.
Tags: NATO, Russia, Europe
Somewhere Near to History: The Wartime Diaries of Reginald Hibbert, SOE Officer in Albania, 1943-1944
RUSI Journal, 24 March 2021Christopher Deliso
Christopher Deliso reviews Somewhere Near to History: The Wartime Diaries of Reginald Hibbert, SOE Officer in Albania, 1943-1944, edited by Jane Nicolov.
Tags: History, Intelligence, Europe
A Globally Postured Regional Navy
RUSI Defence Systems, 24 March 2021Sidharth Kaushal
The new Royal Navy force structure and commitments announced in the Defence Command Paper should create a force broadly suitable for the foreign policy aims laid out in the Integrated Review. However, the second order implications may create problems in future.
Tags: Maritime Forces
Blood, Metal and Dust: How Victory Turned into Defeat in Afghanistan and Iraq
RUSI Journal, 24 March 2021Mungo Melvin
Mungo Melvin reviews Blood, Metal and Dust: How Victory Turned into Defeat in Afghanistan and Iraq, by Ben Barry.
Tags: Iraq, UK DefencePages

Avoiding the Terrorist Trap: Why Respect for Human Rights is the Key to Defeating Terrorism
RUSI Journal, 29 March 2021Georgia Holmer
Georgia Holmer reviews Avoiding the Terrorist Trap: Why Respect for Human Rights is the Key to Defeating Terrorism, by Tom Parker.
Tags: Law and Ethics, Terrorism
Major Theatre War: Russia Attacks the Baltic States
RUSI Journal, 25 March 2021R D Hooker Jr
A hypothetical article on a future conflict takes stock of how NATO lost the Baltic states and the implications for the Alliance.
Tags: NATO
Somewhere Near to History: The Wartime Diaries of Reginald Hibbert, SOE Officer in Albania, 1943-1944
RUSI Journal, 24 March 2021Christopher Deliso
Christopher Deliso reviews Somewhere Near to History: The Wartime Diaries of Reginald Hibbert, SOE Officer in Albania, 1943-1944, edited by Jane Nicolov.
Tags: History, Intelligence
Blood, Metal and Dust: How Victory Turned into Defeat in Afghanistan and Iraq
RUSI Journal, 24 March 2021Mungo Melvin
Mungo Melvin reviews Blood, Metal and Dust: How Victory Turned into Defeat in Afghanistan and Iraq, by Ben Barry.
Tags: UK Defence
Sealing Technology Transfer Leaks: The Whack-a-Mole Analogy
RUSI Journal, 22 March 2021Rebecca Lucas and Trevor Taylor
States that rely on the global exchange of ideas, capital and people face challenges in preventing the theft of sensitive intellectual property.
Tags: Defence Management, Technology
India’s National Security Coordination and Policymaking: Assessing the Role and Influence of Institutions and Individuals
RUSI Journal, 19 March 2021Vinay Kaura
India's National Security Council has become an increasingly important body in the country's defence and security policies.
Tags: Defence Policy
Countering Intelligence Algorithms: Decision Theory, Design Choices and Counter-AI
RUSI Journal, 9 March 2021Peter J Phillips and Gabriela Pohl
Algorithms are not built in a vacuum – they are affected by profoundly human psychological constraints.
Tags: Intelligence, Technology
Russian Electronic Warfare, Cyber and Information Operations in Ukraine: Implications for NATO and Security in the Baltic States
RUSI Journal, 24 February 2021Duncan McCrory
Russia's investment in its electronic, cyber and information capabilities should concern NATO states.
Tags: Cyber, Information, Technology
Between a Pandemic and a Hard Brexit: Grand Strategic Thinking in an Age of Nationalism, Renewed Geopolitical Competition and Human Insecurity
RUSI Journal, 24 February 2021William D James
The UK's turbulent domestic situation has implications for how the country faces external threats.
Tags: Defence Policy, UK Defence
The Personal Costs of War: Illustrated by the 2014 England Football Squad
RUSI Journal, 8 February 2021Jo Spear
Contemporary football provides a reminder of the multinational nature of British society and its historical war effort.
Tags: The Great War, History
Book Review: Institution Building in Weak States: The Primacy of Local Politics
RUSI Journal, 8 February 2021Andrew Rathmell
Andrew Rathmell reviews Institution Building in Weak States: The Primacy of Local Politics, by Andrew Radin.
Tags: Peacekeeping and Peacebuilding
Book Review: How Spies Think: Ten Lessons in Intelligence
RUSI Journal, 7 February 2021Gill Bennett and John Scarlett
Gill Bennett and John Scarlett review How Spies Think: Ten Lessons in Intelligence, by David Omand.
Tags: Intelligence
Book Review: The Grand Strategies of Great Powers
RUSI Journal, 7 February 2021Peter Layton
Peter Layton reviews The Grand Strategies of Great Powers, by Tudor A Onea.
Tags: Defence Policy, Global Security Issues
Editor's Note: RUSI Journal, September 2020
RUSI Journal, 7 February 2021Emma De Angelis
Editor Dr Emma De Angelis introduces the September 2020 issue of the RUSI Journal.
Tags:
Captains of War: History in Professional Military Education
RUSI Journal, 2 February 2021Louis Halewood and David Morgan-Owen
History, if used correctly, can have an important role in professional military education.
Tags: History, Military Personnel
Lessons Learned from Preventing and Countering Violent Extremism in the Western Balkans
RUSI Newsbrief, 9 April 2021Eric Rosand and Eric Manton
The Western Balkans provides useful lessons for improving ‘whole of society’ approaches for addressing extremist violence, including how governments and civil society organisations in the region as well as international partners can bolster them.
Tags:
The Promise and Peril of Russia’s Northern Sea Route
RUSI Newsbrief, 26 March 2021Elizabeth Buchanan
The blockage of the Suez Canal has underscored once more the urgency of diversifying global maritime trade routes. While the Arctic’s Northern Sea Route is often held up as an alternative, it is more likely that the two routes will end up coexisting without undercutting each other.
Tags: Global Security Issues
The Structural Bias for Sanctions
RUSI Newsbrief, 19 March 2021Steven Mann
Sanctions have become a preferred arm of statecraft, especially in Washington. Reasons for this include the West’s confusion in confronting new forms of Russian aggression and the fact that economic sanctions shift the implementation cost from the public to the private sector.
Tags:
The 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh War and the New Strategic Landscape
RUSI Newsbrief, 12 March 2021Michael Hikari Cecire
The war in the South Caucasus has significant implications for regional politics and the wider liberal order.
Tags: Global Security Issues
Seven Reasons Why the US Needs to Re-Engage with Turkey
RUSI Newsbrief, 5 March 2021Taras Kuzio
The election of President Joe Biden presents a strategic opportunity for the US to resume playing a more active role in the South Caucasus, Eurasia and the greater Middle East – if Washington and Ankara can refresh their relationship.
Tags:
The Coronavirus Pandemic: Global Challenges Require Global Cooperation
RUSI Newsbrief, 26 February 2021Andrey Krivorotov, Jennifer Cole and Klaus Dodds
The UK–Russia Security Dialogue addresses the ‘new normal’ of international health policy.
Tags:
What to Do in Afghanistan?
RUSI Newsbrief, 19 February 2021Greg Mills
Donors are caught in a bind in Afghanistan. But it is a bind that ties.
Tags: NATO
Military Takeover in Myanmar and the International Community: Past as Prologue?
RUSI Newsbrief, 12 February 2021Jürgen Haacke
Will the coup in Myanmar follow historical patterns or take a different and unpredictable trajectory?
Tags: United Nations
Japan and the US in the Indo-Pacific
RUSI Newsbrief, 5 February 2021Satoru Mori
The election of Joe Biden presents Japan with new opportunities to shape economic and security dynamics in the Indo-Pacific.
Tags:
Eyes in the Sky: Space and the Defence Command Paper
RUSI Defence Systems, 30 March 2021Alexandra Stickings
In addition to this, there is a commitment of £1.4 billion over 10 years, spread across several programmes. The first of these is UK Space Command, perhaps the most well known of the new initiatives put forward by the current government. This new Command is intended to provide command-and-control in space, to coordinate commercial space operations and to develop capabilities. It is perhaps...
Tags: Aerospace
Talent in a Competitive Age – Searching for a Solution
RUSI Defence Systems, 26 March 2021Paul O'Neill
Inevitably, perhaps, much attention has been given to the headline reduction of the regular Army’s planned size from 82,000 to 72,500 – the Paper uses the Army’s (under)strength figure as its baseline for comparison – and what this means for the UK’s ability to operate at any significant scale. It must be hoped that Defence’s Development, Concepts and Doctrine Centre is wrong about the global...
Tags:
The Integrated Review: Technology, Not People, Is the UK’s Finest Asset
RUSI Defence Systems, 25 March 2021Andrew Young
This is a question that should not be taken lightly. Betting big on the transformative potential of technology goes against even the most cursory review of military history. Technological advantages alone rarely – if ever – guarantee success. Rather, it is the side that harnesses available technology to the best effect that succeeds; innovation is found in successfully combining the ways with the...
Tags:
A Globally Postured Regional Navy
RUSI Defence Systems, 24 March 2021Sidharth Kaushal
In many ways, this represents the textbook balanced force that figures such as Admiral Richard Hill described as optimal for middle power navies; a force capable of providing deterrent capabilities to secure its vital interest and contributing to broader objectives such as stability further afield. While incapable of operating autonomously, middle powers can generate optionality for themselves by...
Tags: Maritime Forces
On Fewer Wings and a Prayer for the Future: The RAF and the Defence Command Paper
RUSI Defence Systems, 23 March 2021Justin Bronk
In the case of C-130J, the larger A-400M Atlas offers longer range and greater payload with comparable (although somewhat less flexible and a lot less mature) tactical insertion capabilities. While the RAF has struggled to expand the A-400M’s range of cleared capabilities to match those of the proven Hercules fleet, French experience with the aircraft would suggest that this has little to do with...
Tags:
Rangers Lead the Way… But Who Follows?
RUSI Defence Systems, 22 March 2021Jack Watling
Changing the ‘Specialised Infantry Group’ into a Security Force Assistance Brigade will allow the Army to provide partner forces with much more rounded and useful support at command echelons. This also provides a command-and-control structure for partnered operations which other elements of the force can plug into. The accompanying element – critical to having credibility with partners – will be...
Tags: Land Forces, UK Defence
What Can the 2011 Libya Campaign Tell Us About the Future Norms of Warfare?
RUSI Defence Systems, 12 March 2021Peter Roberts
In Libya itself, it is worth considering what has changed in country. The situation 10 years, on suggests the West has abjectly failed in its political goals, which is compounded by the unchallenged rise of Russian influence. Libya is now home to a thriving people smuggling business that the EU’s Operation Sophia has dismally failed to counter.What Lessons Should Have Been Learned?Operation...
Tags:
Reports of the ‘Failure’ of the F-35 are Premature and Exaggerated
RUSI Defence Systems, 25 February 2021Justin Bronk
First and foremost, there is no guarantee that the ‘fifth-gen-minus’ fighter concept will yield a viable alternative approach when examined as part of the TacAir study. In the recent Saab/Boeing T-7 trainer competition, and reportedly within the shadowy Next Generation Air Dominance (NGAD) programme, digital design techniques have significantly reduced development timescales and costs compared to...
Tags:
Israeli Options for Direct Attacks on Iranian Nuclear Sites
RUSI Defence Systems, 23 February 2021Ehud Eilam
The Iranian Air Force operates ageing fighters such as the Mig-29 and F-14A Tomcat, but they could credibly threaten either the B-52 or C-130J. Given an IAF fighter escort, the main threat would be from the Russian S-300PMU-2/VM, indigenously produced Bavar-373 and Sayyad series surface-to-air missile systems. A single S-300PMU-2 battery radar could detect up to 100 aircraft simultaneously at a...
Tags:
The Integrated Review: The UK as a Reluctant Middle Power?
Occasional Papers, 31 March 2021Malcolm Chalmers
In the third of a series of reflections on UK foreign policy, Malcolm Chalmers looks at the government’s Integrated Review of Security, Defence, Development and Foreign Policy.
Tags: UK, National Security, UK Defence
UK–Russia Security Dialogue: European Security
Conference Reports, 30 March 2021Malcolm Chalmers and Andrey Kortunov
This Conference Report outlines the main findings of the workshop on ‘European Security’ organised by RUSI and the Russian International Affairs Council in February 2021 as part of the UK–Russia Security Dialogue.
Tags: Russia, UK
Project Sandstone Special Report: Black Gold: Exposing North Korea's Oil Procurement Networks
Other Publications, 22 March 2021James Byrne, Joseph Byrne, Lucas Kuo and Lauren Sung
A joint report between Project Sandstone and C4ADS exposes the networks facilitating North Korea's oil-smuggling activities.
Tags: North Korea, Global Security Issues, Proliferation and Nuclear Policy
Taking the Profit Out of Intellectual Property Crime: Piracy and Organised Crime
Whitehall Reports, 8 March 2021Ardi Janjeva, Alexandria Reid and Anton Moiseienko
This Whitehall Report explores how criminals make money from piracy and provides recommendations on how the UK government, law enforcement and private sector stakeholders can decrease the profitability of doing so.
Tags: AML/CTF, UK, Organised Crime, Technology
A Complex Matter: Examining Reporting on Terrorism in the UK
Occasional Papers, 4 March 2021Jessica White
This Occasional Paper analyses the role of media reporting on the impact of terrorism and offers recommendations to both the police and the media on how to improve their relationship and how they communicate and report on terrorism.
Tags: UK Counter-terrorism, UK
21st-Century Assistance Dogs? Harnessing Data and Technology
Conference Reports, 1 March 2021Paul O’Neill and Alison Gregory
This report reflects the learning from a RUSI/PA Consulting-hosted series of discussion groups on data and technology. The groups were held between June and December 2020, and featured representatives from the public sector, multiple industry sectors and academics.
Tags: Technology
The UK’s Response to Cyber Fraud: A Strategic Vision
Occasional Papers, 22 February 2021Sneha Dawda, Ardi Janjeva and Anton Moiseienko
This paper provides targeted, long-term recommendations for stakeholders across government, law enforcement and the private sector to tackle cyber fraud.
Tags: Cyber, UK
The Contested Relationship Between Youth and Violent Extremism: Assessing the Evidence Base in Relation to P/CVE Interventions
Occasional Papers, 8 February 2021Claudia Wallner
This paper examines the key limitations of youth empowerment interventions in preventing and countering violent extremism, and identifies potential solutions to overcome these.
Tags: Tackling Extremism
Exploring National Cyber Security Strategies: Policy Approaches and Implications
Occasional Papers, 3 February 2021Sneha Dawda
This Occasional Paper examines national cyber security strategies from around the world and identifies six recurring policy challenges to be considered when building a national cyber strategy.
Tags: Information, Technology
The Silent Threat: The Impact of Fraud on UK National Security
Occasional Papers, 26 January 2021Helena Wood, Tom Keatinge, Keith Ditcham and Ardi Janjeva
This paper explores the impact of fraud on the UK's national security landscape, and sets out the case for adopting a fundamentally different pathway for responding to the problem.
Tags: AML/CTF, UK, National Security, Organised Crime
The Case for Joint Military–Industry Greyzone Exercises
Briefing Papers, 28 September 2020Elisabeth Braw
This Briefing Paper suggests that joint military–industry exercises can help build resilience against the increasing number of greyzone attacks that liberal democracies are facing.
Tags: UK, National Security, Resilience
The Integrated Review: Harnessing the UK’s Financial Capabilities in Support of National Security
Briefing Papers, 5 August 2020Tom Keatinge
This Briefing Paper argues that the UK’s finance capabilities can – and should – contribute to a far greater extent to national security.
Tags: UK, National Security
Rethinking the UK Response to Cyber Fraud: Key Policy Challenges
Briefing Papers, 21 July 2020Sneha Dawda, Ardi Janjeva and Anton Moiseienko
This Briefing Paper outlines the challenges faced in responding to the threat from cyber-enabled fraud in the UK, and provides an overview of the challenges in combating cyber fraud over the next decade and beyond.
Tags: Cyber, UK
Coronavirus: Financial Inclusion Considerations for Risk-Based Supervision and the Virus’s Impact on the Risk-Based Approach
Briefing Papers, 13 July 2020Isabella Chase and Tom Keatinge
This Briefing Paper explores how the financial services opportunities created by the coronavirus pandemic can be used to propel the global adoption of a genuinely risk-based approach to supervision and financial crime controls.
Tags: Coronavirus, AML/CTF
Free Ports, Not Safe Havens: Preventing Crime in the UK’s Future Freeports
Briefing Papers, 27 April 2020Anton Moiseienko, Alexandria Reid and Isabella Chase
This Briefing Paper analyses the possible criminal risks posed by the UK's future freeports.
Tags: UK, Domestic Security, Organised Crime
Data Analytics and Algorithmic Bias in Policing
Briefing Papers, 16 September 2019Alexander Babuta and Marion Oswald
This paper summarises the use of analytics and algorithms for policing within England and Wales, and explores different types of bias that can arise during the product lifecycle.
Tags: Equipment and Acquisitions, UK, Securing Britain, Law and Ethics, National Security, Technology
The UK Cyber Strategy: Challenges for the Next Phase
Briefing Papers, 27 June 2019Conrad Prince and James Sullivan
The UK's 2016 National Cyber Security Strategy reaches its conclusion in 2021. At the midway point of the current strategy, and with an upcoming Spending Review, the focus should now be on building the next strategy. This Briefing Paper poses a series of questions to help frame this debate.
Tags: Cyber, UK, Law and Ethics, National Security, Organised Crime, Technology
No Deal, No Data? The Future of UK–EU Law Enforcement Information Sharing
Briefing Papers, 26 February 2019Alexander Babuta
The UK has been instrumental in developing many of the systems relied upon by EU law enforcement agencies, but the advent of Brexit means that the UK may lose access to these important tools. This briefing paper examines three options for UK–EU law enforcement information sharing post-Brexit.
Tags: European Union, UK, National Security, Europe
The Scale of Money Laundering in the UK: Too Big to Measure?
Briefing Papers, 11 February 2019Anton Moiseienko and Tom Keatinge
By measuring the measurable – rather than lamenting the immeasurability of the immeasurable – the lower bounds of the scale of money laundering in the UK can be established.
Tags: AML/CTF, Intelligence
Brexit and European Security
Briefing Papers, 26 February 2018Malcolm Chalmers
RUSI Deputy Director-General Malcolm Chalmers looks at the security implications for the UK and Europe post-Brexit.
Tags: European Union
War by Others’ Means: Delivering Effective Partner Force Capacity Building
Whitehall Papers, 13 November 2020Jack Watling and Nick Reynolds
In a world of powerful states, countries are likely to partner their armed forces to achieve common aims. Efforts to build capacity in partner forces will play a crucial role.
Tags: Defence Policy, Military Personnel
Decision Points: Rationalising the Armed Forces of European Medium Powers
Whitehall Papers, 30 September 2020Edited by Jack Watling
Europe's medium powers face unavoidable tradeoffs when determining the future shape of their militaries.
Tags: Aerospace, Defence Management, Defence Policy, Land Forces, Maritime Forces, Military Personnel, Europe
Future NATO: Adapting to New Realities
Whitehall Papers, 4 April 2020John Andreas Olsen
A rapidly changing security environment poses new challenges for the Atlantic Alliance.
Tags: NATO, Defence Policy, International Institutions, Europe
The Future of NATO Airpower: How are Future Capability Plans Within the Alliance Diverging and How Can Interoperability be Maintained?
Whitehall Papers, 18 December 2019Justin Bronk
NATO members are pursuing different paths – this poses new challenges for working together as an Alliance.
Tags: Aerospace, NATO, Defence Policy, International Institutions
Security in Northern Europe: Deterrence, Defence and Dialogue
Whitehall Papers, 25 October 2018Edited by John Andreas Olsen
There are a number of challenges facing NATO members in coordinating their response to Russia.
Tags: United States, US Defence Policy, NATO, North America, Americas, Germany, Russia, France, UK, Defence Policy, International Institutions, Europe
Strategic Hedging in the Arabian Peninsula: The Politics of the Gulf-Asian Rapprochement
Whitehall Papers, 20 September 2018Jean-Loup Samaan
Offering a new perspective on the geopolitics of Gulf-Asian relations.
Tags: Pacific, Central and South Asia, Middle East and North Africa
Making Mogadishu Safe: Localisation, Policing and Sustainable Security
Whitehall Papers, 31 July 2018Alice Hills
Tailoring approaches to local conditions has been an important aspect of community security in Mogadishu.
Tags: Horn of Africa, Tackling Extremism, Domestic Security, National Security, Terrorism, Africa
The Spectre of a Westphalian Europe?
Whitehall Papers, 7 March 2018Luis Simón
European geopolitics is undergoing a major structural revision.
Tags: NATO, Germany, European Union, Russia, France, UK, Defence Policy, UK Defence, Europe
Russia's New Ground Forces: Capabilities, Limitations and Implications for International Security
Whitehall Papers, 28 June 2017Igor Sutaygin with Justin Bronk
Russia is undertaking a number of reforms to enhance the capabilities of its land forces in the twenty-first century.
Tags: Russia, Defence Policy, Land Forces, Europe
China's Eurasian Pivot: The Silk Road Economic Belt
Whitehall Papers, 31 May 2017Raffaello Pantucci and Sarah Lain
The modern Silk Road is a key component of China's political and economic strategy in Eurasia.
Tags: China, Pacific
Somewhere Near to History: The Wartime Diaries of Reginald Hibbert, SOE Officer in Albania, 1943-1944
RUSI Journal, 24 March 2021Christopher Deliso
Christopher Deliso reviews Somewhere Near to History: The Wartime Diaries of Reginald Hibbert, SOE Officer in Albania, 1943-1944, edited by Jane Nicolov.
Tags: History, Intelligence
Countering Intelligence Algorithms: Decision Theory, Design Choices and Counter-AI
RUSI Journal, 9 March 2021Peter J Phillips and Gabriela Pohl
Algorithms are not built in a vacuum – they are affected by profoundly human psychological constraints.
Tags: Intelligence, Technology
Book Review: How Spies Think: Ten Lessons in Intelligence
RUSI Journal, 7 February 2021Gill Bennett and John Scarlett
Gill Bennett and John Scarlett review How Spies Think: Ten Lessons in Intelligence, by David Omand.
Tags: Intelligence
Enhancing Port and Harbour Security with Unmanned Surface Vehicle Technology
RUSI Defence Systems, 3 December 2020George Galdorisi
Initial trials at the Port of Los Angeles suggest that unmanned surface vehicles offer significant benefits over traditional solutions to providing round-the-clock security coverage for the ports and harbours that underpin the global economy.
Tags: National Security, Resilience
Strategic Culture: In Defiance of a Structural World Order
RUSI Journal, 6 October 2020Patrick Hinton
Strategic culture theory provides much-needed nuance to contemporary fears over the decline of the rules-based international system.
Tags: Global Security Issues, International Institutions
New Intelligence Strategies for a New Decade
RUSI Journal, 23 September 2020Patrick Bury and Michael Chertoff
Intelligence agencies need to develop their strategic intelligence capabilities.
Tags: Intelligence
Legislating to Counter Foreign Influence in the UK: Lessons From Across the Pond
RUSI Newsbrief, 28 August 2020Ben Freeman and Tarun Krishnakumar
As it seeks to develop a transparency-based registration framework to counter foreign influence activities, the UK can learn from the rich experience of the US and the Foreign Agents Registration Act.
Tags: Domestic Security, Law and Ethics
Book Review: Small Wars, Big Data: The Information Revolution in Modern Conflict
RUSI Journal, 20 August 2020Stephen Watts
Stephen Watts reviews Small Wars, Big Data: The Information Revolution in Modern Conflict, by Eli Berman, Joseph H Felter and Jacob N Shapiro.
Tags: Counterinsurgency, Intelligence
The Nexus Between Crime and Violent Extremism in Kenya: A Case Study of Two Prison Complexes
RUSI Journal, 14 August 2020Gayatri Sahgal and Martine Zeuthen
There is little evidence that radicalisation is occurring in Kenya's prisons.
Tags: Terrorism and Conflict, Domestic Security, Terrorism
A Voice on the Stage, Not Just a Seat at the Table
RUSI Newsbrief, 24 July 2020Veerle Nouwens
China is looking to translate its economic power into political influence in international organisations and standards bodies.
Tags: International Security Studies, International Institutions
Dealing with Returning Islamic State Fighters
RUSI Newsbrief, 17 July 2020Sabin Khan
We should take collective global action to hold foreign terrorist fighters to account, prevent impunity, and reverse the growth and influence of global jihadism.
Tags: UK Counter-terrorism, Tackling Extremism, Domestic Security
Recapitalisation of the US Coast Guard: New Ships for the White, Red and Black Hull Fleets
RUSI Defence Systems, 30 June 2020Edward Lundquist
The US Coast Guard is in the midst of a major fleet reset, with new and more capable platforms to replace an aging fleet of patrol ships, inland tenders and icebreakers.
Tags: Domestic Security, Maritime Forces
Understanding NATO
RUSI Journal, 22 June 2020John Andreas Olsen
NATO must be nimble as it responds to new challenges, both inside and outside the Alliance.
Tags: NATO, Defence Policy, Global Security Issues, International Institutions
Insurance Gaps: A Growing Vulnerability for National Security
RUSI Newsbrief, 19 June 2020Hélène Galy and James Vickers
Insurance protection gaps are fast becoming a high-priority issue for national and international security, not just one that captures headlines in the aftermath of natural catastrophes.
Tags: Coronavirus, Domestic Security, Resilience
Towards a New Arctic: Changing Strategic Geography in the GIUK Gap
RUSI Journal, 27 May 2020Rebecca Pincus
The Arctic is increasingly linked to North Atlantic security issues.
Tags: US Defence Policy, NATO, Defence Policy, Climate Security, International Institutions, Maritime Forces
Unintended Consequences: Humanitarianism and CTF Compliance
Multimedia, 12 April 2021Aid organisations must navigate through tough circumstances to reach those most in need. The challenges are not solely physical; they also include compliance with a complex global sanctions and...
Tags: Centre for Financial Crime and Security Studies
Revolutions Of War
Multimedia, 8 April 2021The cycle of "old wars" between nation states, followed by revolutionary wars and culminating during the 20th century into wars between communities was graphically described and codified by Professor...
Tags: Military Sciences
Dinosaur or Innovator? Inside the US AML Machine
Multimedia, 6 April 2021Despite half a century of evolution, the US financial crime policy landscape remains as convoluted and challenging to navigate as ever. Yet, it has also shown real sparks of innovation, particularly...
Tags: Centre for Financial Crime and Security Studies
Evolving the Western Way of War into (and out of) COIN
Multimedia, 1 April 2021The truth universally acknowledged is that Western militaries seem to deliberately discard useful experience faster than they can accumulate it. Changing such a process in a way that builds better...
Tags: Military Sciences
A Transatlantic Dialogue on China
Multimedia, 31 March 2021The United States and Europe share concerns over some of Beijing’s behaviour in the international system. But how aligned at the two sides of the Atlantic on how to manage China’s rise?
Tags: Bridging the Oceans Podcast Series, China, International Security Studies, Navigating the Indo-Pacific, Japan, India, Maritime Forces, Pacific, Central and South Asia
Finding a Balance: Controls vs Inclusion
Multimedia, 29 March 2021A robust anti-money laundering regime prevents crime and terror, yet it can also exclude large portions of society from financial services. Roughly 1.7 billion people across the globe lack access to...
Tags: Centre for Financial Crime and Security Studies
Using the War Law to Assert Legitimacy
Multimedia, 25 March 2021Western military personnel often feel that laws restrict the way they can undertake warfare. Dr Janina Dill, Oxford University's expert in war law and ethics, explains why this restrictive view is...
Tags: Military Sciences
Proliferation finance: A Sub-Saharan African Bank Stays Ahead
Multimedia, 22 March 2021It’s no secret that North Korea and other actors seek to exploit financial systems to pursue their proliferation goals. Sub-Saharan Africa has been one of the most affected regions; its financial...
Tags: Centre for Financial Crime and Security Studies
Climate Change and Security: A Call To Arms - Episode 2
Multimedia, 19 March 2021Research Fellow Alexandra Stickings speaks to Lieutenant General Richard Nugee, Climate Change and Sustainability Strategy Lead in the Ministry of Defence.
Tags: A Call to Arms video series
The Impact of Fraud on UK National Security
Multimedia, 19 March 2021Fraud against UK citizens, businesses, and the public purse has reached unprecedented levels. But does the political narrative in response to this scourge match the enormity of the challenge? The...
Tags: Centre for Financial Crime and Security Studies, AML/CTF
Salvaging the Iran Nuclear Deal: Round One in Vienna, and What Comes Next
Unintended Consequences: Humanitarianism and CTF Compliance
The Imperfect Equilibrium of Russian Civil–Military Relations