05404oam 2200709 a 450 991096595500332120060622082340.097984006179599780313003547031300354810.5040/9798400617959(CKB)111056485429126(EBL)3000728(OCoLC)929145026(SSID)ssj0000110883(PQKBManifestationID)11143290(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000110883(PQKBWorkID)10074651(PQKB)11494048(Au-PeEL)EBL3000728(CaPaEBR)ebr10020847(OCoLC)42733897(DLC)BP9798400617959BC(MiAaPQ)EBC3000728(Perlego)4202321(EXLCZ)9911105648542912619991020e20002024 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrBeyond declaring victory and coming home the challenges of peace and stability operations /edited by Max G. Manwaring and Anthony James Joes ; foreword by Ambassador William Walker1st ed.Westport, Conn. :Praeger,2000.London :Bloomsbury Publishing,20241 online resource (278 p.)Description based upon print version of record.9780275967680 0275967689 Includes bibliographical references and index.Contents; Foreword; Preface; Part I Introduction; Chapter 1 A Multiplicity of Threats, a Paucity of Options: The Global Security Environment at the End of the Twentieth Century Richard L. Millett; Chapter 2 Defense and Offense in Peace and Stability Operations Edwin G. Corr and Max G. Manwaring; Part II The Essential Internal ''Defensive'' Conditions that Lead to Mandated Peace and Stability with Justice; Chapter 3 The Establishment of Order and the Rule of Law: Legitimacy in the Tradition of Non- Traditional Operations (NTOs) Thomas K. AdamsChapter 4 Isolating the Belligerents: A Key to Success in the Post-Counterinsurgency Era Anthony James JoesChapter 5 Sustaining Life, Relieving Suffering, and Regenerating the Economy Arthur E. Dewey; Part III Moving from the ''Defense'' to the Offense; Chapter 6 Military Intelligence and the Problem of Legitimacy: Opening the Model Everett C. Dolman; Chapter 7 Beyond Jointness: Civil-Military Cooperation in Achieving the Desired End- State John T. Fishel; Chapter 8 A Grand National Security Strategy for Legitimate Governance and Crisis Prevention Robert M. HerrickChapter 9 Legitimate Civil Society and Conflict Prevention: LetÌs Get Serious Dayton L. MaxwellPart IV Coping with Chaos in the Post- Cold War High Operational and Strategic Security Environments; Chapter 10 The Anarchic State vs. the Community of Nations: The Real Cleavage in International Security Michael J. Dziedzic; Chapter 11 America Coping with Chaos at the Strategic Level: Facilitator for Democratic Stability in the Post- Counterinsurgency Era Joseph N. McBride; Chapter 12 Responding to the Failed State: Strategic Triage Robert H. Dorff; Part V Where to from Here?Chapter 13 Some Final Thoughts Edwin G. Corr and Max G. ManwaringIndex; About the ContributorsThe political practice of declaring victory and coming home has provided a false and dangerous domestic impression of great success for U.S. unilateral and multilateral interventions in failing and failed states around the world. The reality of such irresponsibility is that the root causes and the violent consequences of contemporary intranational conflict are left to smolder and reignite at a later date with the accompanying human and physical waste. This book discusses why it is incumbent on the international community and individual powers involved in dealing with the chaos of the post-Cold War world to understand that such action requires a long-term, holistic, and strategic approach. The intent of such an approach is to create and establish the proven internal conditions that can lead to a mandated peace and stability-with justice. The key elements that define those conditions at the strategic level include: (1) the physical establishment of order and the rule of law; (2) the isolation of belligerents; (3) the regeneration of the economy; (4) the shaping of political consent; (5) fostering peaceful conflict resolution processes; (6) achieving a complete unity of effort toward stability; and (7) establishment and maintenance of a legitimate civil society. These essential dimensions of contemporary global security and stability requirements comprise a new paradigm that will, hopefully, initiate the process of rethinking both problem and response. Peacekeeping forcesSecurity, InternationalUnited StatesMilitary policyUnited StatesArmed ForcesStability operationsPeacekeeping forces.Security, International.327.1/72Manwaring Max G1169290Joes Anthony James1594433DLCDLCDLCBOOK9910965955003321Beyond declaring victory and coming home4352968UNINA01680nam0 22003733i 450 PUV010571820251003044310.0079239309020131021d1993 ||||0itac50 baengusz01i xxxe z01nSigma delta modulatorsnonlinear decoding algorithms and stability analysisby Soren Hein, Avideh ZakhorBoston <etc.>Kluwer Academicc1993XII, 252 p.24 cmThe Kluwer international series in engineering and computer science213. VLSI, computer architecture and digital signal processing001MIL00222342001 The Kluwer international series in engineering and computer science. VLSI, computer architecture and digital signal processingModulazioneFIRCFIC038721IRivelatoriFIRCFIC017315I621.3815ELETTRONICA. COMPONENTI E CIRCUITI14621.381536Componenti e circuiti. Modulatori e demodulatori (rivelatori)22AvvisatoriRivelatoriAvvisatoriHein, Søren <1968- >PUVV066986070771395Zakhor, Avideh <1963- >PUVV066987070771396ITIT-00000020131021IT-BN0095 NAP 01SALA DING $PUV0105718Biblioteca Centralizzata di Ateneo1 v. 01SALA DING 621.3815 HEI.si 0102 0000028545 VMA A4 1 v. (3. rist. 1997)Y 1997121519971215 01Sigma delta modulators1574098UNISANNIO