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Paperback Importance of Educational and Mental Health Support in Youth DDR Operations - Conflict Zone Childhood Trauma, Islamic State ISIS Rise and Fall, Sierra Book

ISBN: 1699421730

ISBN13: 9781699421734

Importance of Educational and Mental Health Support in Youth DDR Operations - Conflict Zone Childhood Trauma, Islamic State ISIS Rise and Fall, Sierra

Warfare takes a toll on everyone who experiences it. This toll is especially heavy for children who live through a conflict. Experiencing traumatic events in war increases the chances of child survivors suffering from a variety of psychological disorders. War also disrupts the social network around children which further slows childhood development. The Islamic State (IS) deliberately recruited, educated, and radicalized thousands of children during their reign of control in portions of Iraq and Syria. Reintegrating the children traumatized and radicalized by IS requires well thought out and resourced youth Disarmament, Demobilization, and Reintegration (DDR) operations. Not properly reintegrating children traumatized by IS or other conflicts prolongs the time necessary for consolidating gains and undermines national and regional stability. Youth DDR operations in Sierra Leone in 2002 and the Niger River Delta in 2004 and 2009 offer good and bad examples for planning and conducting youth DDR operations in post-conflict Iraq and Syria and beyond. Paramount to the success of youth DDR operations in Iraq and Syria, and in the future, is providing mental health support and reestablishing education systems for traumatized or radicalized children. Not taking a comprehensive approach to reintegrating children lowers the likelihood of successful reintegration and does not address lingering drivers of conflict and instability. Releasing traumatized or radicalized children back into society without ways to improve their lives destabilizes regions and prolongs conflict. Traumatized or radicalized children are more likely targets for later radicalization, spurring instability and increasing the chances of repeated U.S. interventions and deployments to unstable regions. Providing post-conflict mental health and educational support to children by the U.S. military reduces drivers of conflict, supports consolidation of gains, and develops a more lasting peace.This compilation also includes a reproduction of the 2019 Worldwide Threat Assessment of the U.S. Intelligence Community.Military forces utilize Disarmament, Demobilization, and Reintegration (DDR) operations to return combatants to civilian life while also removing drivers of future conflict. When combatants utilized child soldiers or large numbers of children suffered through traumatic events, military planners must develop deliberate plans for reintegrating them. Properly reintegrating children into society after conflict reduces the societal drivers of instability which potentially shortens the time necessary for stability operations. Developing DDR and stability plans after Large-Scale Combat Operations (LSCO) concludes does not provide sufficient time for properly addressing the unique challenges of child psychological and educational reintegration. Not addressing the challenges of childhood reintegration, especially in fragile or failing states, prolongs the time U.S. forces conduct stability operations in a region and exposes the United States to further commitments of national blood and treasure. There are culturally and historically relevant case studies which supply examples for reintegrating children traumatized by the Islamic State. Doctrine accurately states that successful DDR operations promote enduring stability while unsuccessful DDR operations likely results in return to violence. Despite this, doctrine fails to address the needs of children, specifically those traumatized by conflict, when outlining DDR operations. Without addressing the needs of traumatized children, DDR operations will not fully remove the drivers of conflict and societal instability.

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