Conceptualising humanitarian civil-military partnerships in the Asia-Pacific : (re-)ordering cooperation

The Asia-Pacific is a dynamic region that is exposed to multiple natural hazards. This article explores how recent developments have influenced the relationship between civilian and military actors in the Asia-Pacific to facilitate an improvement in humanitarian civil–military coordination to assist...

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Main Authors: Cook, Alistair David Blair, Yogendran, Sangeetha
Other Authors: S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2020
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/143735
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1437352020-09-21T06:09:08Z Conceptualising humanitarian civil-military partnerships in the Asia-Pacific : (re-)ordering cooperation Cook, Alistair David Blair Yogendran, Sangeetha S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies Social sciences::Political science Cooperation Humanitarian Affairs The Asia-Pacific is a dynamic region that is exposed to multiple natural hazards. This article explores how recent developments have influenced the relationship between civilian and military actors in the Asia-Pacific to facilitate an improvement in humanitarian civil–military coordination to assist and protect disaster-affected communities. It investigates civilian and military engagement in disaster preparedness and response activities in the Asia-Pacific, and draws on the literature on civil–military relations and technical reports to further conceptualise these. This article analyses the 4Cs of disaster partnering in humanitarian civil–military partnerships in the Asia-Pacific—(1) Coexistence/Communication, (2) Cooperation, (3) Coordination, (4) Collaboration [Martin, E., I. Nolte, and E. Vitolo. 2016. “The Four Cs of Disaster Partnering: Communication, Cooperation, Coordination and Collaboration.” Disasters 40 (4): 621–643]. It argues that the Regional HADR Coordination Centre (RHCC), UN Cluster System, the Regional Consultative Group on Humanitarian Civil–Military Coordination for Asia and the Pacific (RCG), and Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN) centric mechanisms are illustrative of different orders of disaster partnering that are best understood as a combination of distinct and sequential activities. Through a clearer conceptualisation of humanitarian civil–military partnerships in the Asia-Pacific, this article aims to provide more informed expectations on what these partnerships may or may not deliver. This work was supported by Leverhulme Trust [grant number SRG\170645]. 2020-09-21T06:09:08Z 2020-09-21T06:09:08Z 2019 Journal Article Cook, A. D. B., & Yogendran, S. (2020). Conceptualising humanitarian civil-military partnerships in the Asia-Pacific : (re-)ordering cooperation. Australian Journal of International Affairs, 74(1), 35-53. doi:10.1080/10357718.2019.1693498 1035-7718 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/143735 10.1080/10357718.2019.1693498 1 74 35 53 en Australian Journal of International Affairs © 2019 Australian Institute of International Affairs. All rights reserved.
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social sciences::Political science
Cooperation
Humanitarian Affairs
spellingShingle Social sciences::Political science
Cooperation
Humanitarian Affairs
Cook, Alistair David Blair
Yogendran, Sangeetha
Conceptualising humanitarian civil-military partnerships in the Asia-Pacific : (re-)ordering cooperation
description The Asia-Pacific is a dynamic region that is exposed to multiple natural hazards. This article explores how recent developments have influenced the relationship between civilian and military actors in the Asia-Pacific to facilitate an improvement in humanitarian civil–military coordination to assist and protect disaster-affected communities. It investigates civilian and military engagement in disaster preparedness and response activities in the Asia-Pacific, and draws on the literature on civil–military relations and technical reports to further conceptualise these. This article analyses the 4Cs of disaster partnering in humanitarian civil–military partnerships in the Asia-Pacific—(1) Coexistence/Communication, (2) Cooperation, (3) Coordination, (4) Collaboration [Martin, E., I. Nolte, and E. Vitolo. 2016. “The Four Cs of Disaster Partnering: Communication, Cooperation, Coordination and Collaboration.” Disasters 40 (4): 621–643]. It argues that the Regional HADR Coordination Centre (RHCC), UN Cluster System, the Regional Consultative Group on Humanitarian Civil–Military Coordination for Asia and the Pacific (RCG), and Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN) centric mechanisms are illustrative of different orders of disaster partnering that are best understood as a combination of distinct and sequential activities. Through a clearer conceptualisation of humanitarian civil–military partnerships in the Asia-Pacific, this article aims to provide more informed expectations on what these partnerships may or may not deliver.
author2 S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies
author_facet S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies
Cook, Alistair David Blair
Yogendran, Sangeetha
format Article
author Cook, Alistair David Blair
Yogendran, Sangeetha
author_sort Cook, Alistair David Blair
title Conceptualising humanitarian civil-military partnerships in the Asia-Pacific : (re-)ordering cooperation
title_short Conceptualising humanitarian civil-military partnerships in the Asia-Pacific : (re-)ordering cooperation
title_full Conceptualising humanitarian civil-military partnerships in the Asia-Pacific : (re-)ordering cooperation
title_fullStr Conceptualising humanitarian civil-military partnerships in the Asia-Pacific : (re-)ordering cooperation
title_full_unstemmed Conceptualising humanitarian civil-military partnerships in the Asia-Pacific : (re-)ordering cooperation
title_sort conceptualising humanitarian civil-military partnerships in the asia-pacific : (re-)ordering cooperation
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/143735
_version_ 1681057295740436480