Academic literature on the topic 'Army talks'

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Army talks"

1

Schomerus, Mareike. "Even eating you can bite your tongue : dynamics and challenges of the Juba peace talks with the Lord's Resistance Army." Thesis, London School of Economics and Political Science (University of London), 2012. http://etheses.lse.ac.uk/734/.

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This thesis offers an alternative narrative why the Juba Peace Talks between the Government of Uganda and the rebel Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) and its political wing, the Lord’s Resistance Movement (LRM), did not produce a Final Peace Agreement. Widely considered the most promising peace effort in the history of a violent conflict that began in 1986, talks were mediated by the Government of Southern Sudan from 2006 to 2008. During this time, the parties signed five separate agreements on a range of issues, yet in 2008 the LRA’s leader, Joseph Kony, failed to endorse them through a final signature. An aerial attack on the LRA by the Ugandan army spelled the end of the Juba Talks. It is commonly argued that as the first peace talks conducted with people wanted by the International Criminal Court, the Juba Talks collapsed because the arrest warrants made a negotiated agreement impossible. Another widely accepted reason is that the LRA/M were not committed to peace. This thesis, however, argues that how the LRA/M experienced the muddled and convoluted peace talks was the crucial factor because the dynamics of the process confirmed existing power dynamics. Internally, the LRA/M’s dynamics were profoundly influenced by their perception of being trapped in an established hostile system, causing a struggle to transform their own dynamics constructively. Offering an analytical chronology of the Juba Talks with an empirical emphasis on the perspective of the LRA/M and an analysis of LRA/M structures and behavioural patterns that emerged in the process, this thesis further outlines that judging success or failure of a peace process on whether agreements have been signed is misplaced. Despite not producing a final agreement, the Juba Talks contributed to peace and change in Uganda.
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2

Higgs, Bryn. "The International Criminal Court’s intervention in the Lord’s Resistance Army war: impacts and implications." Thesis, University of Bradford, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/10454/12741.

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This thesis argues that the International Criminal Court (ICC) brings a new more deontological paradigm to international interventions, founded upon the universal application of legal principle, and displacing consequentialist notions of justice linked to human rights. Based upon the Court’s Statute and mode of operations, it is argued that this is associated with assumptions concerning the ICC’s primacy, military enforcement, and theory of change. The consequences of this development in volatile contexts are demonstrated. The case study, founded upon analysis from the war-affected community, examines the impact of the International Criminal Court in the Lord’s Resistance Army war, and reveals the relationship between criminal justice enforcement, and community priorities for peace and human rights. On the basis of evidence, and contrary to narratives repeated but unsubstantiated in the literature, it demonstrates that in this case these two imperatives were in opposition to one another. The Court’s pursuit of retributive legal principle was detrimental to the community’s interests in peace and human rights. The subsequent failure of the ICC’s review process to interrogate this important issue is also established. The research establishes that statutory and operational assumptions upon which Court interventions are based do not hold in volatile contexts. For the case study community and elsewhere, this has had adverse impacts, with significant implications for the ICC. The findings indicate that if these issues are not fundamentally addressed, principled international criminal justice enforcement in volatile environments will continue to have profoundly negative human rights consequences.
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3

Higgs, Bryn. "The International Criminal Court's intervention in the Lord's Resistance Army war : impacts and implications." Thesis, University of Bradford, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/10454/12741.

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This thesis argues that the International Criminal Court (ICC) brings a new more deontological paradigm to international interventions, founded upon the universal application of legal principle, and displacing consequentialist notions of justice linked to human rights. Based upon the Court’s Statute and mode of operations, it is argued that this is associated with assumptions concerning the ICC’s primacy, military enforcement, and theory of change. The consequences of this development in volatile contexts are demonstrated. The case study, founded upon analysis from the war-affected community, examines the impact of the International Criminal Court in the Lord’s Resistance Army war, and reveals the relationship between criminal justice enforcement, and community priorities for peace and human rights. On the basis of evidence, and contrary to narratives repeated but unsubstantiated in the literature, it demonstrates that in this case these two imperatives were in opposition to one another. The Court’s pursuit of retributive legal principle was detrimental to the community’s interests in peace and human rights. The subsequent failure of the ICC’s review process to interrogate this important issue is also established. The research establishes that statutory and operational assumptions upon which Court interventions are based do not hold in volatile contexts. For the case study community and elsewhere, this has had adverse impacts, with significant implications for the ICC. The findings indicate that if these issues are not fundamentally addressed, principled international criminal justice enforcement in volatile environments will continue to have profoundly negative human rights consequences.
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4

Workman, Bren K. "Lateral coordination of interdependent U.S. Army information tasks." Thesis, Monterey, Calif. : Naval Postgraduate School, 2008. http://edocs.nps.edu/npspubs/scholarly/theses/2008/Dec/08Dec%5FWorkman.pdf.

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Thesis (M.S. in Information Operations)--Naval Postgraduate School, December 2008.<br>Thesis Advisor(s): Rothstein, Hy ; Jansen, Erik. "December 2008." Description based on title screen as viewed on February 5, 2009. Includes bibliographical references (p. 87-90). Also available in print.
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5

Balaskovits, Alison Ann. "A Girl Without Arms and Other Stories." Bowling Green State University / OhioLINK, 2011. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=bgsu1306956342.

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6

Stansfield, Ron E. (Ron Earl) Carleton University Dissertation International Affairs. "Taming the technological beast: the failure of Salt II to introduce stability into superpower strategic nuclear forces structures." Ottawa, 1992.

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7

Dreger, Randy William. "Relationship between the 20 meter shuttle run test and selected occupationally related army field tasks." Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 1998. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk2/ftp01/MQ28889.pdf.

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8

Tyler, Amy Eleanor. "The action of trunk muscles in arm reaching tasks." Diss., The University of Arizona, 1994. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/186686.

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The electromyographic (EMG) activity of trunk muscles has received little attention for tasks such as arm movements which do not explicitly direct trunk behavior. For such tasks, trunk muscles are considered to play a postural role, but only a limited set of conditions have been examined. The experiments presented in this study were designed to examine the relationship of the activity of trunk muscles at the initiation of rapid reaching movements to postural requirements as target direction and distance were broadly varied. Seated subjects performed bilateral arm reaching movements in the vertical plane to visible targets in many directions and at several distances. Surface EMG was recorded from trunk and shoulder muscles. Trunk position, trunk acceleration, and wrist acceleration were recorded. EMG patterns of the trunk muscles varied systematically with both target direction and target distance. The initial configuration of the body was varied to determine if the systematic variation with target direction was specific to one of three reference axes: the longitudinal axis of the forearm, the longitudinal axis of the trunk, or an absolute vertical axis that was external to the body. No one reference axis proved to have a stronger relationship with the activity of the trunk muscles across all target directions. Calculated muscle torques were compared to recorded activity of trunk muscles. Across all target directions and distances, trunk EMG at movement onset was not always qualitatively consistent with resisting either the calculated static torques of the final position or the segmental interactive effects of the arm on the trunk. By broadly varying target direction and distance, it was made clear that the activity of the trunk muscles was not universally related to any of the control requirements tested. Regardless, systematic changes in EMG patterns were observed for trunk muscles with target direction and target distance. The regularities of the data were more striking than the scatter. These regularities make the data a critical test for any proposed control schemes of trunk muscle activity.
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9

Vardaxis, Vassilios. "Learning adaptations in performance production measures of novel multijoint tasks." Thesis, McGill University, 1995. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=40016.

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The present thesis investigated the process of gross motor skill acquisition in the context of how movement pattern characteristics are organized and modified as a result of learning. The process of multisegmental skill acquisition was studied using performance production measures as a window to explore stable and transient changes in the movement control process. Bernstein's principles of exploitation of motion dependent torques, and the minimization of the degree of freedom were tested.<br>Twenty male subjects performed a total of 240 trials, as fast and accurate as possible, over 4 sessions for two tasks with different level of complexity (10 subjects per task). Kinematic and EMG data were acquired for a two segment model of the arm using a lightweight, adjustable manipulandum, and surface EMG for the PDL, PEC, TRI, and BIC muscles. Movement organization characteristics were revealed by wave pattern analyses performed with a phase breakdown technique, CCCF on torque partitioning components, and the CFs on the muscle activation waveforms.<br>The experimental protocol allowed enough practice for the tasks to be learned resulting in PT decrease. Consistent adaptations in movement organization were revealed by all three levels of analysis. Improvement in the performance production measures were in the same direction for both learning conditions, and the rate of change within experimental sessions decreased over time. The significant adaptations in movement organization occurred at the critical phases of each task (i.e. the power absorption--phase simple task, and the reversal phase--complex task). The EMG and joint torque components demonstrated significant amplitude and profile changes particularly during the critical phases. The subjects learned to perform the tasks faster by compensating the motion dependent torques components with the muscle torques in time and amplitude. This finding was consistent with the principle of exploitation of motion dependent torques which was enhanced with learning. Significant task specific motor program adaptations were revealed by the SVD analysis. The minimization of the degree of freedom hypothesis is consistent with the increasing covariation observed over learning between the antagonists PEC and BIC in the simple task, and for both the agonists PDL and TRI and antagonists PEC and BIC in the complex task. In addition the results justified the use of waveform analysis on performance production measures, as a method that can reveal important adaptation details in the underlying control mechanisms for gross motor skill.
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10

Wood, John K. "An evaluation of varying distribution policies for the Commander's Independent Thermal Viewer on U.S. Army main battle tanks." Thesis, Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School, 1992. http://hdl.handle.net/10945/23888.

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