Day: August 12, 2013

Peace picks, August 12-16

Just a few events in DC during a quiet mid-August week:

1.  Between War & Peace: Do We Need New Tools For Messy Transitions?


Date Tuesday, August 13, 2013
Time 9:30 – 11 a.m.
Location 1111 19th Street NW, 12th Floor, Washington, DC 20036

The office of the Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction issued its final lessons learned report earlier this year. Among the recommendations was a call for establishing a new U.S. Office for Contingency Operations, for planning and implementing the diverse activities required in post-conflict deployments, not necessarily of the scale or purpose of the Iraq situation. Our panel will discuss the requirement for such a capability in the U.S. system, consider options to achieve greater planning and execution effectiveness, and also look at what tools and processes reside in the UN system.

RSVP HERE

 

Speakers:
Stuart W. Bowen, Jr., Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction

James A. Schear, former Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense, Partnership Strategy and Stability Operations

William Durch, Stimson Senior Associate and Co-director of the Future of Peace Operations program

Moderator:
Ellen Laipson, President and CEO, Stimson Center

2.  How Perception Dictates Actions in Ambiguous Situations: Game Theory Analysis of the Third North Korean Nuclear Crisis

August 13, 2013 // 1:30pm2:30pm

Jung Joo Kwon, Korea Foundation Junior Scholar, will present the results of her research conducted at the Wilson Center on the third North Korean nuclear crisis. Arguing that the perception of decision-makers plays as an important role in determining policy agenda as factors such as internal, external and systemic settings, Kwon suggests that it is important to analyze how perceptions and images are formed. Game theory provides a valid analytical tool to explore the decision-making process in international relations in general and in the case of North Korea in particular. Through game theory analysis, Kwon identifies the patterns of perception/misperception around the third North Korean nuclear crisis in order to understand the shift of powers and policies at the time.

James Person, Senior Program Associate with the History and Public Policy Program, will chair and comment on Kwon’s discussion.

Jung Joo Kwon is presently a Korea Foundation Junior Scholar in residence at the Wilson Center. Kwon is completing a master’s degree in International Affairs and Governance at the University of St. Gallen St. Gallen, Switzerland, working on a thesis entitled “Escaping Middle Income Trap in Asia through the National Innovative Capacity: Focused on the Case of South Korea.” She previously earned a Master’s of Arts in International Management from the Graduate School of International Studies, Yonsei University, and a Bachelor’s of Arts in Business Administration from Hanyang University.

Location:

4th Floor, Woodrow Wilson Center Read more
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