Difference between revisions of "Advanced Research and Assessment Group"

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(I suspect Wikipedia article might have been written by either Chris Donnelly or Jamie Macintosh)
 
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|website=http://www.da.mod.uk/colleges/arag
 
|website=http://www.da.mod.uk/colleges/arag
 
|abbreviation=ARAG
 
|abbreviation=ARAG
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|founders=Chris Donnelly
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|members= Jamie MacIntosh,Steve Tatham
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|start=2005
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|end=2009
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|description=Spooky department of the [[Defence Academy of the United Kingdom]], run by [[Chris Donnelly]]
 
}}
 
}}
 
The '''Advanced Research and Assessment Group''' (ARAG) was a department of the [[Defence Academy of the United Kingdom]] concerned with long-term planning and threat assessment. On 1 April 2009, ARAG was integrated into the Headquarters of the Defence Academy as the Research & Assessment Branch (R&AB).<ref>[http://www.da.mod.uk/sites/da/colleges/arag Research & Assessment Branch (R&AB)], Defence Academy of the United Kingdom website, accessed 4 Feb 2010.</ref>
 
The '''Advanced Research and Assessment Group''' (ARAG) was a department of the [[Defence Academy of the United Kingdom]] concerned with long-term planning and threat assessment. On 1 April 2009, ARAG was integrated into the Headquarters of the Defence Academy as the Research & Assessment Branch (R&AB).<ref>[http://www.da.mod.uk/sites/da/colleges/arag Research & Assessment Branch (R&AB)], Defence Academy of the United Kingdom website, accessed 4 Feb 2010.</ref>
  
ARAG brought together experts from the military, academia and other fields in "research clusters" dedicated to specific areas of concern, in order to provide policy-makers with focussed analysis of international security issues.  
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==Overview==
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ARAG was established in [[2005]] by [[Chris Donnelly]]. ARAG brought together experts from the military, academia and other fields in "research clusters" dedicated to specific areas of concern, in order to provide policy-makers with focussed analysis of international security issues. It produced a large number of research papers as well as more targeted limited distribution work.{{cn}}
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ARAG worked closely with the [[Conflict Studies Research Centre]], which was co-located with ARAG at the Defence Academy's Shrivenham campus.{{cn}}
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In [[2007]] Donnelly handed management of ARAG to [[Jamie MacIntosh]], the former Special Advisor to the Home Secretary [[John Reid]].{{cn}}
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ARAG also administered the Defence Academy Reserve Cadre, a network of over 70 Reserve Forces personnel with unusual civilian skills sets or languages. The Cadre personnel were designed to augment regular forces and other government departments in providing specialist civilian skills in operational areas.{{cn}}
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ARAG was renamed Research & Assessment Branch in late [[2009]] and, losing its own budget, incorporated into the [[Defence Academy of the United Kingdom|Defence Academy]]'s HQ Building - newly refurbished to accommodate them. Widely flagged as a means to preserve ARAG's capability, the Defence Academy's Director General, Lieutenant General [[Andrew Graham]], told the staff that he was 'passionate about research' and that the capability was secure under his tenure.[citation needed] However less than three months later and despite having an annual budget of less than £1 million, ARAG was closed down in February 2010 by General Graham as a cost-saving measure.{{cn}}
  
ARAG worked closely with the [[Conflict Studies Research Centre]], which was co-located with ARAG at the Defence Academy's Shrivenham campus.
 
 
==People==
 
==People==
*Dr [[J. P. Macintosh]], Head of ARAG circa 2007<ref> Web archive: [http://web.archive.org/web/20071209235631/www.defac.ac.uk/colleges/csrc/ www.defac.ac.uk/csrc/], archived 26 September 2007, accessed 1 March 2009.</ref>|
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*Dr [[Jamie P. Macintosh]], Head of ARAG circa 2007<ref> Web archive: [http://web.archive.org/web/20071209235631/www.defac.ac.uk/colleges/csrc/ www.defac.ac.uk/csrc/], archived 26 September 2007, accessed 1 March 2009.</ref>|
 
*[[Steve Tatham]] Listed as 'current Director of Communication Research' at the [[UK Defence Academy]]'s [[Advanced Research and Assessment Group]] on his own website in February 2010, though the ARAG was subsumed into the [[Research & Assessment Branch]] on 1 April 2009<ref>Steve Tatham, [http://www.stevetatham.net Strategic Communication] accessed 03/01/10 </ref>
 
*[[Steve Tatham]] Listed as 'current Director of Communication Research' at the [[UK Defence Academy]]'s [[Advanced Research and Assessment Group]] on his own website in February 2010, though the ARAG was subsumed into the [[Research & Assessment Branch]] on 1 April 2009<ref>Steve Tatham, [http://www.stevetatham.net Strategic Communication] accessed 03/01/10 </ref>
 
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*[[Chris Donnelly]] - later of the [[Integrity Initiative]]
 
{{SMWDocs}}
 
{{SMWDocs}}
 
==References==
 
==References==
 
<references/>
 
<references/>
{{Stub}}
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{{PageCredit
[[Category:Terrorism Industry]][[Category:Counterinsurgency]]
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|site=Wikipedia
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|date=03.03.2022
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|url=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Advanced_Research_and_Assessment_Group
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}}

Latest revision as of 01:14, 16 March 2023

Group.png Advanced Research and Assessment Group   WebsiteRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
AbbreviationARAG
Formation2005
FounderChris Donnelly
Extinction2009
Membership• Jamie MacIntosh
• Steve Tatham
Spooky department of the Defence Academy of the United Kingdom, run by Chris Donnelly

The Advanced Research and Assessment Group (ARAG) was a department of the Defence Academy of the United Kingdom concerned with long-term planning and threat assessment. On 1 April 2009, ARAG was integrated into the Headquarters of the Defence Academy as the Research & Assessment Branch (R&AB).[1]

Overview

ARAG was established in 2005 by Chris Donnelly. ARAG brought together experts from the military, academia and other fields in "research clusters" dedicated to specific areas of concern, in order to provide policy-makers with focussed analysis of international security issues. It produced a large number of research papers as well as more targeted limited distribution work.[citation needed]

ARAG worked closely with the Conflict Studies Research Centre, which was co-located with ARAG at the Defence Academy's Shrivenham campus.[citation needed]

In 2007 Donnelly handed management of ARAG to Jamie MacIntosh, the former Special Advisor to the Home Secretary John Reid.[citation needed]

ARAG also administered the Defence Academy Reserve Cadre, a network of over 70 Reserve Forces personnel with unusual civilian skills sets or languages. The Cadre personnel were designed to augment regular forces and other government departments in providing specialist civilian skills in operational areas.[citation needed]

ARAG was renamed Research & Assessment Branch in late 2009 and, losing its own budget, incorporated into the Defence Academy's HQ Building - newly refurbished to accommodate them. Widely flagged as a means to preserve ARAG's capability, the Defence Academy's Director General, Lieutenant General Andrew Graham, told the staff that he was 'passionate about research' and that the capability was secure under his tenure.[citation needed] However less than three months later and despite having an annual budget of less than £1 million, ARAG was closed down in February 2010 by General Graham as a cost-saving measure.[citation needed]

People

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References

  1. Research & Assessment Branch (R&AB), Defence Academy of the United Kingdom website, accessed 4 Feb 2010.
  2. Web archive: www.defac.ac.uk/csrc/, archived 26 September 2007, accessed 1 March 2009.
  3. Steve Tatham, Strategic Communication accessed 03/01/10
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