4,565 research outputs found

    A method of assessing the quality of pharmaceutical market and industry reports as a source to study access to medicines

    Full text link
    This repository item contains a single issue of the Health and Development Discussion Papers, an informal working paper series that began publishing in 2002 by the Boston University Center for Global Health and Development. It is intended to help the Center and individual authors to disseminate work that is being prepared for journal publication or that is not appropriate for journal publication but might still have value to readers.Market and industry reports can be useful in studying access to medicines from a pharmaceutical market perspective. However, many market and industry reports lack some or much of the information required to conduct analyses to study access to medicines and are often not transparent in their data sources and research methodologies. The instrument developed in this study, titled the Pharmaceutical Market and Industry Report Assessment Tool (PIRAT), assesses the quality of pharmaceutical market and industry reports, specifically focusing on the needs of public health researchers, and includes criteria describing the content and quality of the market reports. The assessment tool generates an unweighted score indicating the relative strengths and weaknesses of reports

    Ethics and the Return to Strategy

    Get PDF
    Today there is a return to strategy in the foreign and defense policies of the United States and its allies. Strategy’s return has been prompted by the need to make decisions about when, where and how to use force to deter, disrupt and destroy individuals, groups and states that seek to upset the spread of democracy and free markets. Because force is now being considered not just to deter war, but also to wage war, there is a need to reconsider the ethical challenges created by the return of strategy. These challenges will manifest in a variety of ways, but they are likely to fall heavily on elected officials and military professionals as they grapple with terrorism and other unconventional forms of warfare and integrate new technologies into traditional force structures

    Counter proliferation, conventional counterforce and Nuclear War

    Get PDF
    The article of record as published may be found at https://doi.org/10.1080/0140239000843777

    Introduction, David Sherman’s ‘William Friedman and Pearl Harbor’: A Symposium

    Get PDF
    The article of record as published may be found at https://doi.org/10.1080/02684527.2017.140022

    Role of Energy Security in Homeland Defense: Understanding the Threat

    Get PDF

    The Cyber Pearl Harbor redux: helpful analogy or cyber hype?

    Get PDF
    The article of record as published may be found at https://doi.org/10.1080/02684527.2018.1460087This article defends the utility of employing the Pearl Harbor analogy to characterize contemporary cyber threats, especially threats facing the United States. It suggests that despite the fact that policy-makers are keenly aware of the nature of today’s cyber threats, this knowledge does not necessarily protect them from falling victim to a strategically significant cyber surprise attack. The fact that elected officials and senior officers fall victim to strategic surprise attacks launched by known adversaries is the problematique that animates the study of intelligence failure. The article concludes with the observation that just because scholars and policy-makers can imagine a ‘Cyber Pearl Harbor’ does not guarantee that they can avoid a Cyber Pearl Harbor

    Ground alert for looking glass: SAC's new emphasis on strategic warning

    Get PDF
    The article of record as published may be found at https://doi.org/10.1080/0743017910840548

    The "Unlessons" of Vietnam

    Get PDF
    The article of record as published may be found at https://doi.org/10.1080/0743017012004179
    • …
    corecore