Skip to main content (Press Enter).
Toggle navigation
National Defense University Press
The premier professional military and academic publishing house
NDU Press
Search
Search NDU Press:
Search
Search NDU Press:
Search
Home
About
Essay Competitions
Joint Force Quarterly
PRISM
Other Publications
Books
Case Studies
Occasional Papers
Policy Briefs
Strategic Monographs
Submit a Manuscript
Contact
Browse by
Publication Type
Books
Case Studies
CCO Case Studies
CSWMD Case Studies
ICAF Case Studies
NWC Case Studies
Faculty Seminars
Journals
Joint Force Quarterly
JFQ
JFQ Issues
PRISM Journal
PRISM
PRISM Issues
Occasional Papers
China Strategic Perspectives
CSWMD Occasional Papers
CTNSP Defense and Technology Papers
CTNSP Working and Occasional Papers
INSS Strategic Perspectives
Middle East Strategic Perspectives
Policy Briefs
Defense Horizons
Strategic Forums
Strategic Monographs
Working Papers
Regions
Asia and the Pacific
Europe
Latin America and the Caribbean
Middle East and North Africa
Russia and Eurasia
Ukraine
Sub-Saharan Africa
Topics
Acquisition
Biological & Chemical Defense
Countering WMD
Cybersecurity
Defense Budgets
Defense Policy
Deterrence
Education
Ethics & Leadership
Health
Homeland Security
Humanitarian Assistance & Disaster Relief
Insurgency/Irregular Warfare
International Law & National Security Law
Terrorism & Extremism
Joint Strategic Logistics
Military History
Military Psychology & Resilience
Military Strategy
Missile Defense
National Security Reform
NATO
Nuclear Policy
Organizational Change
Space
Stabilization & Reconstruction
Supply Chain Management
Technology & Innovation
WMD Elimination
WMD Preparedness/Response
Publications
PHOTO INFORMATION
Download
Details
Share
Defense Partnerships: Documenting Trends and Emerging Topics for Action
by Samuel Bendett
News
| March 1, 2015
Defense Partnerships: Documenting Trends and Emerging Topics for Action
By Samuel Bendett
Defense Horizons 78
DOWNLOAD PDF
Key Points
Further integration along with a shared forum for common procedures, roadblocks, and solution sets will help inform and address public-private, public-public (P4) functional stovepiping and specialized P4 success in the Department of Defense (DOD).
There is a need for formal capture of enterprise-wide best practices and lessons observed.
DOD personnel have significant training and competency in their specific career field, but there appears to be a need to either integrate or identify P4 subspecialties to develop P4 through the ranks.
Cross-Service collaboration and interagency planning, tiger-teaming, and convening non-DOD stakeholders with DOD counterparts will support P4s both at a project level and an enterprise level.
READ MORE >>
SHARE
PRINT