Research Newsletter Issue #3 Jan-Jun 2024

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Volume 2 l Issue 3 l Jan - Jun 2024

Rabdan

Academy's Impact

A glimpse into the intellectual vibrancy of

Rabdan's community

Bi-annual Newsletter l Volume 2 l Issue 3 l Jan - Jun 2024

I am so delighted to be given the opportunity to welcome you to this

edition of Rabdan Academy newsletter. It is indeed a pleasure for me to

see the outstanding outputs of Rabdan Academy Faculty members to be

presented in this newsletter. I am impressed of the amount of hard work

and efforts done to make this achievement a success. This newsletter

contains research activities outputs in terms of publications and

possible patents filing which are indicators of excellent performance.

Reading through this newsletter you will discover that sensitive areas

such as Security, Safety, Defense, Emergency preparedness and Crisis

management (SSDEC) were covered by qualitative and quantitative

research approaches.

In this edition the latest selected success stories in research and

innovation are highlighted to give readers the chance to view Rabdan

Academy research throughput. This is not the end of our research

activities deliverables, there are many others achievements to share

with you in the next near future. The publication of this newsletter will be

on periodic intervals, the next publication will carry attractive and

significant dissemination of Rabdan Academy research performance.

We hope you enjoy this edition of our newsletter and we also encourage

you to keep in touch for the next editions.

Division Director’s

Message

Dr. Naji Mohammed Al Seiari

Division Director - Research and Innovation &

Interim Dean of Faculty

Security

Policing

Emergency and Crisis

Management

Page 5 - 7

Researches on

Page 5

Full article published in: Routledge | 2024

To read more

Military modernisation in Southeast

Asia after the cold war: Acquisition,

retention, and geostrategic impacts

Dr. Shang-Su Wu

Assistant Professor and

Research Coordinator

Homeland Security

Rabdan Academy

Southeast Asian countries represent a wide range of approaches to

military modernisation due to their great diversity in politics,

economies, geography and other factors. Bounded by the Pacific

and Indian Oceans and located between China and India is the

setting for the geostrategic impacts of military modernisation in

Southeast Asian countries.

Differing from previous research focused on military acquisition,

this book additionally covers retention of assets and carefully

examines the ageing issues that affect readiness and capabilities.

In doing so, it provides a comprehensive view of military

modernisation. This book also compares each country’s situation in

the region in terms of military strength and security challenges to

elaborate on the geostrategic impacts of military modernisation.

The ten cases of military modernisation in the post-Cold War

context provide rich content for readers to explore the evolution of

military modernisation in developing countries after 1991.

This book sheds light on security studies of Southeast Asia and is a

useful resource for academic researchers, policy-makers and

defence practitioners.

Research & Innovation

Newsletter

Volume 2 l Issue 3 - 2024

Trilemma Tradeoffs in

International Relations:

An Analytical Framework

Page 6

Full article published in: Global Studies Quarterly, Volume 4, Issue 1 | 2024

To read more

Dr. Olivier Lewis

Assistant Professor

Defense and Security Program

Rabdan Academy

Over the past fifty years, scholars have drawn attention to the

consequences

of

trying

to

overcome

open-

ness/effectiveness/autonomy trilemmas, especially in monetary

policy and trade policy. Despite this, few have noticed the ubiquity

of such policy trilemmas in international relations. This article

presents a comprehensive analytical framework that captures the

core concepts and causal mechanisms relevant to understanding

these trilemmas, and identifies opportunities for future research.

The

first

section

provides

an

analytical

review

of

openness/effectiveness/autonomy trilemmas.

By doing so, it highlights three features of trilemmas: that goal

attainment is a question of degree, that goal attainment varies

across time, and that policy constraints affect states

asymmetrically. The second section presents a typology of

trilemma-based policy goals (openness, regulatory effectiveness,

and policymaking autonomy) and associated “disciplining”

mechanisms that explain the likelihood of trilemma tradeoffs (i.e.,

market-based, politics-based, and law-based mechanisms). The

third section shows how the trilemma framework presented in this

article can facilitate the empirical study of threefold policy

tradeoffs in all aspects of international relations, including

security and defense.

Research & Innovation

Newsletter

Volume 2 l Issue 3 - 2024

Research & Innovation

Newsletter

Volume 2 l Issue 3 - 2024

Dr. Osama Ahmed

Khashan

Associate Researcher and

Associate Professor

Research & Innovation Centers

Rabdan Academy

In the realm of wireless sensor networks (WSNs), preserving data

integrity, privacy, and security against cyberthreats is paramount.

Proxy re-encryption (PRE) plays a pivotal role in ensuring secure

intra-network communication. However, existing PRE solutions

encounter persistent challenges, including processing delays due to

the transfer of substantial data to the proxy for re-encryption and the

computational intensity of asymmetric cryptography. This study

introduces an innovative PRE scheme that is meticulously customized

for WSNs to enhance the secure communication between nodes

within the network and external data server. The proposed PRE

scheme optimizes efficiency by integrating lightweight symmetric

and asymmetric cryptographic techniques, thereby minimizing

computational costs during PRE operations and conserving energy

for resource-constrained nodes. In addition, the scheme incorporates

sophisticated key management and digital certificates to ensure

secure key generation and distribution, which in turn, facilitates

seamless authentication and scalable data sharing among the

entities in WSN. This scheme maintains sensor-node data encryption

and delegates secure re-encryption tasks exclusively to cluster

heads, thereby reinforcing data privacy and integrity.

The results confirm that the proposed PRE scheme significantly

enhances the security, efficiency, and overall network lifetime of

WSNs.

Innovative Energy-Efficient Proxy

Re-Encryption for Secure

Data Exchange in Wireless Sensor

Networks

Page 7

Full article published in: IEEE Access, Volume 12 | 2024

To read more

Page 9 - 11

Security

Policing

Emergency and Crisis

Management

Researches on

Research & Innovation

Newsletter

Volume 2 l Issue 3 - 2024

To read more

Building police capability in

child protection in Kenya

Page 9

Full article published in: Child Abuse & Neglect, Volume 147, January | 2024

To read more

Lydia Davenport

Lecturer

Policing and Security

Rabdan Academy

Dr. Eric Halford

Assistant Professor

Policing & Security Program

Rabdan Academy

Building police capability in

child protection in Kenya

Existing literature illustrates a high prevalence of child protection

issues throughout Kenya. This is adjoined by additional research

detailing issues of corruption, cultural rationalization and the

potential lack of capability to deal with the problem in existing law

enforcement practices. There is no specific research that

investigates the establishment or operational function of a child

protection department within law enforcement in Kenya. This study

aims to address this research gap by exploring the establishment of

an overseas initiative to support the development of a child

protection function in the National Police Service of Kenya and to

analyse the conditions in developing the project.

The results evidenced the need to focus in three key areas when

building child protection capability overseas to create a successful

function; the requirement to tailor context specific understanding of

the culture and operating environment, the need to understand the

current and potential capabilities within this context, and the

importance of obtaining leadership and governance support from

appropriate stakeholders both internally and externally. These

themes begin to develop a base for the development of international

practice for the establishment of overseas child protection policing

functions

Research & Innovation

Newsletter

Volume 2 l Issue 3 - 2024

The ‘haves and have-nots’ of

social support during police

recruitment: why the playing field is

anything but level

Page 10

Full article published in: Policing and Society | 2024

To read more

Dr. Gareth Lee Stubbs

Assistant Professor

Policing and Security

Rabdan Academy

Stephen Tong

Kingston University

Current police recruitment research is often focused on

disproportionate outcomes based upon identity-based categories

such as race, ethnicity, or gender. National government statistics and

political discourse support this research agenda, indicating a

significant recruitment gap in representation in England and Wales.

This gap has resulted in the design and use of ‘in-house’ positive

action initiatives for police recruitment, with little examination of

their impact or otherwise. To understand this research gap, this paper

applies a labour market lens to police recruitment. This study

contributes to existing research by exploring how police recruits

navigate the recruitment process using their social resources. It

represents 27 in-depth, participant-led, long-form interviews within

an English Constabulary, informed by the theory of Social

Embeddedness. It explores how candidates who did not receive

positive action navigated and perceived their recruitment process,

whilst using their friends, family, and acquaintances for both

instrumental and pastoral support. This is contrasted against those

candidates that utilised positive action initiatives. The results

illustrate developed social embeddedness within police recruitment

in the researched constabulary.

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