Transformative Innovation for Development and Emergency Support
The STAR-TIDES project is a global knowledge-sharing research network coordinated at the George Mason University. It is derived from a research project called TIDES which was originally a research effort for the Institute for National Strategic Studies at the National Defense University --part of the Department of Defense. The STAR-TIDES project promotes sustainable support to stressed populations – post-war, post-disaster, or impoverished, in foreign or domestic contexts, for short-term or long-term operations. The project provides reach-back “knowledge on demand” to decision-makers and those working in the field. It uses public-private partnerships and “whole-of-government” approaches to encourage unity of action among diverse organizations where there is no unity of command, and facilitates both inter-agency and international engagement.
Strategy
TIDES has three main goals, to:- Leverage global network
- Promote integrated approaches
- Sustain through private sector
- Stabilization & Reconstruction in Afghanistan
- Humanitarian Assistance/Disaster Relief in tropical regions
- Defense Support to Civil Authorities in the US and
- Building Partnership Capacity in Latin America and Africa.
In lieu of the deployable, expensive systems that DoD often brings to these contingencies, STAR-TIDES focuses on seven infrastructures: shelter, water, power, integrated combustion and solar cooking, cooling/lighting/heating, sanitation and information & communications technologies. Solutions need to be sustainable by local populations with the resources they're likely to have available, and all information will be made available in the public domain via this website.
Once examples of low cost infrastructures are identified, “cross-cutting” solution sets can be tailored to the needs of the local coalitions of business, government and civil society—those who will have to implement and sustain them on the ground. Not all solutions suit all scenarios—building partner nation capacity to stabilize southern archipelagoes calls for different answers than supporting mountain earthquake victims in winter. STAR-TIDES’ focus on the needs of “relevant populations” contributes to humanitarian assistance, the Millennium Development Goals, and peace building. It supports public diplomacy, meets National Security Strategy guidance, and improves the inter-agency's ability to work together and interact with participants in civil-military missions, such as when implementing the National Incident Management System. In addition, all parties may save money by agreeing on which supplies could best be provided by governments, and which by non-government entities, commercial supply chains, or empowered individuals.