Read more
This book advances the contemporary intervention literature by focusing on Canadian Armed Forces deployments and the role of the public service. The author focuses on three recent post-Afghanistan deployments, including Iraq, Ukraine, Mali, and one non-deployment to Colombia, seeking to explain why the Canadian government varies in deploying the armed forces abroad, specifically the time required to announce a deployment and the deployment s composition/size. The book seeks to examine the civil-military relationship in Canada and highlight aspects of the principal-agent relationship by focusing on how the federal bureaucracy defines and shapes military commitments. These four case studies look past the implementation stage of the decision-making process to explain how federal bureaucracies impact policy through agenda setting and policy formulation, specifically in regards to the use of armed force abroad.
List of contents
Chapter 1 - Introduction: Assumptions, Importance, and Definitions.- Chapter 2 - Explaining Canadian Interventions.- Chapter 3 OPERATION IMPACT: IRAQ - Deploying a relatively large contingent quickly (850 personnel deployed in 4-5 weeks).- Chapter 4 OPERATION UNIFIER: UKRAINE - Deploying a relatively small contingent slowly (200 personnel deployed in 11 weeks).- Chapter 5 - OPERATION PRESENCE: MALI - Deploying a relatively small contingent even slower (250 personnel deployed in 19 weeks).- Chapter 6 - OPERATION CHALLENGE: COLOMBIA - A very slow non-deployment decision (0 Personnel in 39 weeks).- Chapter 7 - Conclusion: The Role of Bureaucracy in Intervention.
About the author
Mike G. Fejes is Assistant Professor at The Royal Military College of Canada in Kingston, Ontario where he has taught since 2019. An infantry officer with 30 years of military service in both the regular and reserve force (including five international deployments and one domestic response operation), his research includes civil-military relations, comparative defence policy, and the contemporary use of armed force.
Summary
This book advances the contemporary intervention literature by focusing on Canadian Armed Forces deployments and the role of the public service. The author focuses on three recent post-Afghanistan deployments, including Iraq, Ukraine, Mali, and one non-deployment to Colombia, seeking to explain why the Canadian government varies in deploying the armed forces abroad, specifically the time required to announce a deployment and the deployment’s composition/size. The book seeks to examine the civil-military relationship in Canada and highlight aspects of the principal-agent relationship by focusing on how the federal bureaucracy defines and shapes military commitments. These four case studies look past the implementation stage of the decision-making process to explain how federal bureaucracies impact policy through agenda setting and policy formulation, specifically in regards to the use of armed force abroad.