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El. knyga: Social Science Goes to War: The Human Terrain System in Iraq and Afghanistan

2.80/5 (10 ratings by Goodreads)
Foreword by , Edited by (Temple University), Edited by (US Naval War College)
  • Formatas: EPUB+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 11-Jan-2015
  • Leidėjas: OUP India
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780190613372
  • Formatas: EPUB+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 11-Jan-2015
  • Leidėjas: OUP India
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780190613372

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The Human Terrain System (HTS) was catapulted into existence in 2006 by the US military's urgent need for knowledge of the human dimension of the battlespace in Iraq and Afghanistan. Its centrepiece was embedded groups of mixed military and civilian personnel, known as Human Terrain Teams (HTTs), whose mission was to conduct social science research and analysis and to advise military commanders about the local population. Bringing social science - and actual social scientists - to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan was bold and challenging. Despite the controversy over HTS among scholars, there is little good, reliable source material written by those with experience of HTS or about the actual work carried out by teams in theatre. This volume goes beyond the anecdotes, snippets and blogs to provide a comprehensive, objective and detailed view of HTS. The contributors put the program in historical context, discuss the obstacles it faced, analyse its successes, and detail the work of the teams downrange. Most importantly, they capture some of the diverse lived experience of HTS scholars and practitioners drawn from an eclectic array of the social sciences.
Foreword vii
David H. Petraeus
1 Introduction: Unveiling the Human Terrain System
1(44)
Montgomery McFate
Janice H. Laurence
2 Mind the Gap: Bridging the Military/Academic Divide
45(46)
Montgomery McFate
3 An Anthropologist at War in Afghanistan
91(28)
Ted Callahan
4 What Do You Bring to the Fight? A Year in Iraq as an Embedded Social Scientist
119(22)
Katherine Blue Carroll
5 Playing Spades in Al Anbar: A Female Social Scientist Among Marines and Special Forces
141(26)
Jennifer A. Clark
6 The Four Pillars of Integration: How to Make Social Science Work in a War Zone
167(20)
Kathleen Reedy
7 Investing in Uncertainty: Applying Social Science to Military Operations
187(26)
James Dorough-Lewis Jr.
8 Allied Civilian Enablers and the Helmand Surge
213(24)
Leslie Adrienne Payne
9 Assessing the Human Terrain Teams: No White Hats or Black Hats, Please
237(28)
Carolyn Fluehr-Lobban
George R. Lucas Jr.
10 Tangi Valley: The Limitations of Applied Anthropology in Afghanistan
265(26)
Brian G. Brereton
11 The Human Terrain System: Some Lessons Learned and the Way Forward
291(26)
Janice H. Laurence
Appendix: Interview Questions for HTS Personnel 317(2)
Notes 319(46)
Index 365