By Robert D. Lamb ■ It’s common to talk about the evolution of machines in comparison to humans — the Turing test, when will computers be as intelligent as humans, can robots be conscious like humans, etc. But there’s a forgotten tradition of research (called cybernetics) that compares humans, machines, and human societies to see what […]
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Coming Soon: Long Version of “Dual-System Problem”
For years, I’ve been researching, writing, speaking, advising, and ranting about systemic problems in foreign-policy making, especially with regards to complex conflicts, stabilization and reconstruction, and international development. Today, Melissa Gregg and I submitted the full draft of our joint monograph, “The Dual-System Problem in Complex Conflicts,” arguing that policy systems today are fundamentally unadapted to the complex […]
Read more...Unlearned Lessons and the Dual-System Problem (SSI commentary)
By Robert D. Lamb ■ My most recent commentary focuses why policy systems so often fail to institutionalize lessons learned with respect to conflict, fragility, and development—and what the research community can do differently to help policy makers overcome barriers to effectiveness. > Read the full commentary here
Read more...Announcing the Foundation for Inclusion
For the past year or so, in my spare time, I have been quietly working on a new initiative with the intention of launching it soon after the election, whatever the outcome. Throughout my professional and volunteer career, I’ve worked in various ways on issues of exclusion – exclusion from political systems, from economic opportunity, […]
Read more...Preparing for Complex Conflicts (USIP brief)
By Robert D. Lamb and Melissa R. Gregg ■ The United States and its partners have not been unambiguously successful in most of the conflicts they have been engaged in since 9/11. In some cases, conflicts that had seemed settled erupted again under different guises. Combatants that had appeared defeated emerged under different names. Partners […]
Read more...Thoughts on “Ungoverned Areas and Threats from Safe Havens”
It feels strange that my name (to the degree anyone knows who I am) is still associated with the term “ungoverned” — I hate the term and use it only in scare quotes today, as should be clear to anyone who’s read the final report of the Ungoverned Areas Project (which I led as a Defense Department […]
Read more...Impact Accounting Prototype Under Development (Imp-Act™)
I’ve spent a good number of years thinking about what it would take to build a tool that people in international development, peacebuilding, and social impact more broadly could use to help them to anticipate whether projects, programs, or other things they’re planning to do are actually feasible. The “MAC” (managing absorptive capacity) research I […]
Read more...Grateful to Have Had John Steinbruner as a Mentor
John Steinbruner invited me to meet with him at his house a couple of weeks ago. After a short chat, I left with a pretty clear sense he was nearing his end. And yet his mind was as sharp as always, even if his speech couldn’t keep up. John was the kind of scholar who had […]
Read more...The Uncertain Transition from Stability to Peace (CSIS report)
By Robert D. Lamb, Kathryn Mixon, and Sarah Minot ■ Most violent conflicts since the turn of this century were in countries that had experienced an earlier violent conflict. How can we tell when a country is likely to remain stuck in a cycle of violence? What factors suggest it might be “ripe” for stabilizing and […]
Read more...Legitimacy in the Banking Sector: A New Framework for Analyzing the Quality of Stakeholder Relations (Cornerstone Capital report)
By Michael Shavel, Robert D. Lamb, and Diane B. Glossman ■ In a post Global Financial Crisis world, investors are questioning long-term earnings and valuation prospects for the banking sector. Tougher regulation, particularly on capital, liquidity and structure, are exerting pressure on the traditional banking business and clouding the outlook for investors. To better understand an […]
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