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  • 1
    UID:
    gbv_1653252774
    Format: Online Ressource (390 S.) , Tab., Lit.Hinw.
    Edition: Online-Ausg.
    Series Statement: Strategic Studies Institute Book
    Language: English
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  • 2
    UID:
    gbv_175898662X
    Format: x, 55 Seiten , 1 Illustration , 28 cm
    Edition: Also available on the internet via WWW in PDF format
    ISBN: 9781977405593 , 1977405592
    Content: Chapter One: Singapore in the Context of U.S.-China Competition -- Chapter Two: Singapore's Diplomacy: Maintaining a Delicate Balance -- Chapter Three: China's Economic Importance to Singapore -- Chapter Four: Singapore Defense Relations: Heavily Favoring United States but Not Snubbing China -- Chapter Five: Outlook and Options -- Appendix A: Detailed Framework Variable Coding.
    Content: This report on Singapore is part of a project examining the perspectives of U.S. allies and partners in the Indo-Pacific as they formulate and implement their responses to China's more assertive foreign and security policy behavior in the region and to a more competitive U.S.-China relationship. Singapore views its relations and partnership with the United States as essential to its security policy. It sees the U.S. regional presence as playing an indispensable role in ensuring its ability to navigate a regional security environment that is increasingly complicated by China's growing influence and more-assertive Chinese behavior. At the same time, China is Singapore's most important trading partner, and Singapore aims to maintain a stable relationship with China even as it resists Chinese influence and interference. The U.S.-Singapore relationship is a success story: Singapore has been and remains a strategic partner for U.S. diplomacy and security efforts in Southeast Asia and the Indo-Pacific region more broadly. To sustain this success in ways that will buttress U.S. competitive advantage will require a steady hand at the helm of the relationship, strengthening ties across economic and security domains while recognizing the importance to Singapore of stable relations with and growing economic ties to China. Singapore's geographic location astride the Straits of Malacca, its outsize influence in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), and the military support afforded the United States by infrastructure and access in Singapore make investments in U.S. attention and treasure both necessary and worthwhile
    Note: "RAND Project AIR FORCE." , "Prepared for the United States Air Force." , Includes bibliographical references (pages 47-55) , See also RAND/RB-10137-AF, RAND/RR-4412-AF, RAND/RR-4412/1-AF, RAND/RR-4412/2-AF, RAND/RR-4412/3-AF, RAND/RR-4412/4-AF, RAND/RR-4412/6-AF , Also available on the internet via WWW in PDF format.
    Language: English
    Keywords: China ; USA ; Außenpolitik ; Sicherheitspolitik ; Rivalität ; Singapur
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  • 3
    UID:
    gbv_1758987030
    Format: xiv, 141 Seiten , Karten, Diagramme , 28 cm
    Edition: Also available on the internet via WWW in PDF format
    ISBN: 1977405185 , 9781977405180
    Content: Chapter One: Introduction -- Chapter Two: Research Scope, Design, and Methodology -- Chapter Three: What Are Influence and Competition for Influence? -- Chapter Four: What Are the United States and China Competing for in the Indo-Pacific? -- Chapter Five: How Can We Measure and Assess Influence? -- Chapter Six: How Do Regional Countries View U.S. Versus PRC Influence? -- Chapter Seven: How Could the United States Work More Effectively with Allies and Partners? -- Chapter Eight: Conclusions and Recommendations -- Appendix A: Basic Identification of U.S. Objectives -- Appendix B: Detailed Framework Variable Coding -- Appendix C: Chinese Views of Current U.S., Allied, and Partner Efforts -- Appendix D: Top U.S. Allied and Partner Security Providers for Southeast Asia.
    Content: In long-term strategic competition with China, how effectively the United States works with allies and partners will be critical to determining U.S. success. To enable closer cooperation, the United States will need to understand how allies and partners view the United States and China and how they are responding to U.S.-China competition. In this report, which is the main report of a series on U.S.-China competition in the Indo-Pacific, the authors define what U.S.-China competition for influence involves and comparatively assess U.S.-China competition for influence in six countries in Southeast Asia-Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam-as well as the roles of three U.S. allies and partners that are active in Southeast Asia-Australia, India, and Japan. The authors first explore why the United States is competing with China in the Indo-Pacific and what the two are competing for. They then develop a framework that uses 14 variables to assess relative U.S.-Chinese influence across countries in the Indo-Pacific. Drawing from interviews in all nine countries and data gathered, the authors apply this framework to assess how regional countries view U.S.-China competition in their respective countries and how China views competition in each of the regional countries. Finally, the authors discuss how the United States could work more effectively with allies and partners in Southeast Asia and beyond
    Note: "RAND Project AIR FORCE." , "Prepared for the United States Air Force." , Includes bibliographical references (pages 108-141) , See also RAND/RB-10137-AF, RAND/RR-4412/1-AF, RAND/RR-4412/2-AF, RAND/RR-4412/3-AF, RAND/RR-4412/4-AF, RAND/RR-4412/5-AF, RAND/RR-4412/6-AF , Also available on the internet via WWW in PDF format.
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe Lin, Bonny Regional responses to U.S.-China competition in the Indo-Pacific Santa Monica, Calif. : RAND Corporation, 2020
    Language: English
    Keywords: USA ; China ; Außenpolitik ; Sicherheitspolitik ; Rivalität ; Asiatisch-Pazifischer Raum
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  • 4
    UID:
    gbv_1742286658
    Format: xiii, 64 pages , 23 cm
    Edition: Also available on the internet via WWW in PDF format
    ISBN: 9781977404763 , 1977404766
    Series Statement: [Research report] RR-A176-1
    Content: CHAPTER ONE: Introduction -- Sources and Methods -- Organization of This Report -- CHAPTER TWO: China Prioritizing Big Data Analytics -- Implementing the National Big Data Strategy -- Stakeholders in the National Big Data Strategy -- A True Whole-of-Government Approach -- CHAPTER THREE: Case Study I: Preventing Crime and Enhancing Domestic Control -- A Police Cloud with No Limits -- Focus on Ethnic Minorities -- National Social Credit System: Coming Soon -- COVID-19: Dress Rehearsal for Population Control? -- Omniscience with Chinese Characteristics -- CHAPTER FOUR: Case Study II: Enhancing People's Liberation Army Warfighting -- Capabilities -- Defining Big Data for the People's Liberation Army -- National Defense Big Data Is Key to Winning the Great Power Struggle -- Military Applications of Big Data -- Next Up: Transitioning from Informatization to Intelligentization -- CHAPTER FIVE: Concluding Thoughts and Future Research.
    Content: China's leaders' quest to achieve an artificial intelligence (AI) capability to perform a variety of civilian and military functions starts with mastering big data analytics-the use of computers to make sense of large data sets. The research conducted by the authors of this report indicates that China is aggressively working toward becoming a global leader in big data analytics as part of its plan to achieve great power status; indeed, President Xi Jinping has articulated that China should become the global center for AI by 2030. Beijing's efforts are guided by a national big data strategy, an effort that encompasses economic, military, police, and intelligence functions. The authors find that Beijing is already using big data analytics to survey the country's domestic population and enhance its military capabilities. Improvements in big data analytics have supported Beijing's monitoring and control of its citizens-including ethnic minorities
    Note: "RAND National Defense Research Institute." , Includes bibliographical references (pages 51-64) , Also available on the internet via WWW in PDF format.
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe Grossman, Derek Chinese views of big data analytics Santa Monica, Calif. : RAND Corporation, 2020 ISBN 9781977404763
    Additional Edition: ISBN 1977404766
    Language: English
    Keywords: China ; Künstliche Intelligenz ; Big Data ; Datenanalyse ; Zivilbevölkerung ; Überwachungstechnik ; Militärtechnik
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  • 5
    UID:
    gbv_1737731932
    Format: xviii, 135 pages , Illustrationen, Karten, Diagramme
    Edition: Also available on the internet via WWW in PDF format
    ISBN: 9781977401854 , 1977401856
    Content: Introduction -- Grand Strategies for China -- Framing the Future: Political Control and Social Stability -- Rebalancing Diplomacy and Economics, Restructuring Science and Technology -- Restructuring National Defense -- Future Scenarios, Competitive Trajectories, and Implications.
    Content: To explore what extended competition between the United States and China might entail out to 2050, the authors identified and characterized China's grand strategy, analyzed its component national strategies (diplomacy, economics, science and technology, and military affairs), and assessed how successful China might be at implementing these over the next three decades. China's central goals are to produce a China that is well governed, socially stable, economically prosperous, technologically advanced, and militarily powerful by 2050. China has delineated specific objectives regarding economic growth, regional and global leadership in evolving economic and security architectures, and control over claimed territory. In several cases, these objectives bring China into competition, crisis, and even potential conflict with the United States and its allies. China's leaders clearly recognize this and have delineated and prioritized specific actors and actions as threats to the achievement of these objectives. With the United States, China seeks to manage the relationship, gain competitive advantage, and resolve threats emanating from that competition without derailing other strategic objectives (particularly those in the economic realm). Preparing for a triumphant or ascending China seems most prudent for the United States because these scenarios align with current national development trends and represent the most-challenging future scenarios for the U.S. military. In both scenarios, the U.S. military should anticipate increased risk to already threatened forward-based forces in Japan, South Korea, and the Philippines and a loss of the ability to operate routinely in the air and sea space above and in the Western Pacific
    Note: "Prepared for the United States Army. Approved for public release; distribution unlimited" , Includes bibliographical references (pages 121-135) , Also available on the internet via WWW in PDF format.
    Language: English
    Keywords: China ; USA ; Wettbewerb ; Rüstungswettlauf ; Internationale Politik ; Militärische Planung ; Militärische Bedrohung ; Szenario
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  • 6
    UID:
    gbv_1859905641
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (vi, 38 Seiten) , Diagramme
    ISBN: 9781977411228
    Series Statement: Conference Proceedings
    Language: English
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  • 7
    UID:
    gbv_1789455642
    Format: ix, 56 Seiten , Diagramme , 28 cm
    ISBN: 9781977408068 , 1977408060
    Content: Chapter One: Introduction -- Chapter Two: Literature Review -- Chapter Three: Democratization in the Data -- Chapter Four: Case Studies -- Chapter Five: Discussion and Conclusions -- Appendix A: Summary of Findings from the Literature -- Appendix B: Data and Model.
    Content: In Asia over the past decade, democratization has been uneven. Asia is the only world region for which democracy scores have improved over the past two decades. However, as shown by the illiberal trend in recent years in many countries of South and Southeast Asia, including those that are long-established democracies, democracy remains fragile. Why do some Asian states consolidate democratic gains while others slide toward authoritarianism? In this report, RAND researchers study democratization and the factors that influence it among small Asian states, identify policies that can support democratization, and examine how external actors can help countries democratize. They follow a three-stage approach: (1) a literature review to identify global and Asian trends in democratization and to identify factors that might influence it; (2) a statistical analysis to discover the factors that are statistically significant for Asia relative to global factors; and (3) interview-based case studies of four Asian states-Taiwan, Thailand, Sri Lanka, and Malaysia-at different stages of democratization
    Note: Tabellen , Literaturangaben , Literaturhinweise Seite 51-56
    Language: English
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  • 8
    UID:
    gbv_1860198317
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (xi, 196 Seiten) , Diagramme
    ISBN: 9781977410542
    Series Statement: Research Report
    Content: The U.S. and Chinese militaries have been shaped by a distinct set of direct and indirect experiences. The U.S. military has focused its energy and resources on combating terrorism and performing counterinsurgency operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. Even in 2023, U.S. emphasis on major power competition contends with other national security priorities, including current crises and continued deployments around the globe. The People's Liberation Army (PLA), on the other hand, has largely focused its military modernization and restructuring to prepare for a regional conflict that would likely involve U.S. military intervention. Despite having no combat experience since the 1979 Sino-Vietnamese War, the PLA has conducted an in-depth study of all aspects of the U.S. military's technological and operational capabilities-including its organization, command and control, logistics, joint operations, and concepts of operation-since the 1990s. The dichotomy presented by the experiences of both militaries raises several questions about how they are preparing for the possibility of a major power conflict. Since 2001, the U.S. military has gained significant direct combat experience, but has done so against technologically inferior, nonpeer adversaries. In contrast, the PLA had no direct combat experience. Even though its concepts of operation are designed to fight a major power, these concepts are largely derived from indirect observations and lessons from U.S. operations since 1991. The ways that each side gains and processes experience and incorporates it into training will heavily affect readiness for and performance in a future war
    Language: English
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