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New Ways of War Insurgencies, ‘Small Wars’, and the Past and Future of Conflict

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Frank Hoffman, United States Department of Defense, ‘Hybrid Threats in Context’.. Theo Farrell, Kings College London, ‘The War for Helmand: Britain’s Military Campaign, 2006-2010’ Panel

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New Ways of War? Insurgencies, ‘Small Wars’, and the Past and

Future of Conflict

1st-2nd June 2011 Clinton Institute for American Studies, University College Dublin

Funded by the Graduate School, College of Arts and Celtic Studies, UCD

PROGRAMME

Wednesday, 1st June

1030 Coffee/registration

1100-1110 – Opening Remarks: David Fitzgerald, UCD

1110-1300 – Panel 1

1300-1400 – Lunch

1400-1530 – Panels 2 & 3

1530-1600 – Break (tea and coffee)

1600 -1730 – Panels 4&5

1730-1800 – Break (tea and coffee)

1800-1930 – Plenary Address: Hew Strachan, Oxford University

1930- Wine Reception

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Thursday, 2nd June

0930-1100 – Panels 6&7

1100-1130 – Break (tea and coffee)

1130-1300 – Panels 8&9

1300-1400 – Lunch

1400-1530 – Plenary Address: Professor Mark Grimsley, The Ohio State University 1530-1600 – Break (tea and coffee)

1600-1730 – Panels 10&11

1730-1830 – Closing roundtable

2000 – Conference Dinner

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Panel One: Thinking about Small Wars

T X Hammes, National Defense University, ‘Why the U.S counterinsurgency strategy isn’t and its best practices aren’t’

Frank Hoffman, United States Department of Defense, ‘Hybrid Threats in Context’

Theo Farrell, Kings College London, ‘The War for Helmand: Britain’s Military Campaign, 2006-2010’

Panel Two: Advisors and Counterinsurgency: the Afghanistan Experience

Steve Grenier, United States Department of Defense, ‘A Critical Analysis of American Advisory Efforts in Afghanistan, 2002-2009’

William Rosenau, CNA Strategic Studies, ‘Cops and Counterinsurgency: Police Assistance, State-Building, and the Lessons of Afghanistan’

Madeleine Wells, George Washington University, ‘Foreign Military Assistance in an Age of Counterinsurgency’

Panel Three: Education and Small Wars

Mike Cosgrave, UCC, ‘Teaching 4GW’

Conor Galvin, UCD, ‘New War/New Peace? Working towards a Comprehensive Approach in Peace Support Preparation and Training at UNTSI’

Catherine Baker, University of Southampton, ‘Politics, crisis and demand for language

knowledge in the British response to the war in Bosnia-Herzegovina’

Panel Four: 18 th Century Small Wars

Sylvie Kleinmann, UCD, ‘The first subversive war? Lessons on irregular and ideological warfare from the French Revolution’

James McIntyre, Moraine Valley Community College, ‘South Carolina 1780-81: A Bloody Contest of Counterinsurgency and Insurgency’

John W Hall, University of Wisconsin at Madison, ‘Washington’s Irregulars: Petite Guerre in the American Revolution’

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Panel Five: The IRA and the Irish War of Independence

Timothy B Hoyt, ‘Defeat, Disarmament and Re-integration: The Irish Experience in the 20th

Century’

John Borgonovo, UCC, ‘Insurgent Intelligence in Cork 1918-21’

Jerome Devitt, Independent Scholar, ‘The IRA and the Western Way of War 1916-21’

Panel Six: Clausewitz, Theorists and Counterinsurgency

Steve Torrente, Independent Scholar, ‘Evaluating Counterinsurgency as Political Theory’

Bart Schuurman, Utrecht University/Leiden University, ‘Clausewitz and the ‘New Wars’

Scholars’

Tony Corns, Independent Scholar, ‘Learning from Mars or from Minerva?: Clausewitz, Liddell Hart, and the Two Western Ways of War’

Panel Seven: 1917-23 as a Turning Point in the History of Small Wars

James Kitchen, UCD, ‘Fighting their own “Small War”: The Jewish Legion, 1917-1921’

John Paul Newman, UCD, ‘Balkan Paramilitarism after the First World War: Origins and

Legacies’

Julia Eichenberg, UCD, ‘Insurgents, Independence Fighters, Army Founders? Paramilitary Formations in Poland, 1914-1921’

Panel Eight: Lesson- Learning and Counterinsurgency

Andrew Mumford, University of Sheffield, ‘Puncturing the Counterinsurgency Myth: Britain and Irregular Warfare in the Past, Present and Future’

Weichong Ong, Nanyang Technological University, ‘The Twin Emergencies in Malaysia (1948-1989): Securing the Population and Making the State’

David Fitzgerald, UCD, ‘Remembering Vietnam: The US Army’s Lessons of Vietnam and Counterinsurgency Doctrine in the 1970s’

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Panel Nine: Forgotten Conflicts, New Approaches

Clionadh Raleigh, Trinity College Dublin, ‘The Growing Informality of Political Violence within African Conflicts: An Investigation of Thugs, Militias and Violence Entrepreneurs’ Robert McNamara, University of Ulster, ‘Muito Secreto: The Rise and Fall of Exercise

ALCORA’

Nihat Ali Özcan, Economic Policy Research Foundation of Turkey, ‘The Changing Character of the PKK-led Insurgency and Turkey’s Reformed COIN Campaign’

Panel Ten: Civil Society and Small Wars

Dawn Walsh, DCU, ‘Small Wars – The British government and the IRA, policy adaptation or policy learning?’

Stuart Maslen, Geneva Academy of International Humanitarian Law , ‘New Wars, New Laws?’ Erik Claessen, Belgian Joint Staff, ‘Civil Society and Conflict Termination: A Historical

Perspective’

Panel Eleven: Global Counter-Terrorism and Global Counterinsurgency

Guy Berry, United States Naval Academy, ‘Mosaic World: The Expanding Cyber Landscape and Future War’

Maria Ryan, University of Nottingham, ‘”War in Countries we are not at war with”: The

Pentagon’s New Counter-Terrorism doctrine’

Markus Kienscherf, Freie Universität Berlin, ‘A Programme of Biopolitical Imperialism: Global Counterinsurgency and Human Security’

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