Security & Defence Agenda

The Security & Defence Agenda (SDA) was a security and defence think-tank based in Brussels. Its activities included debates, international conferences and a range of publications. In October 2014, most of the activities of the SDA were incorporated into the Friends of Europe think-tank.

The Security & Defence Agenda (SDA) provided a neutral meeting point for defence and security specialists from NATO and the EU. The SDA developed into an important forum for the discussion of defence and security policies. With the rapidly evolving nature of the security environment, the SDA champion dynamic new ways of consulting global opinion on security issues, including the world's only mass-participation online security policy event, the Security Jam, and its Cyber-Security Initiative.

The Security Jam continues to be run by Friends of Europe. This massive online brainstorm brings together several thousand participants from around the globe, and from the security sector at large – civilians and military from national governments, international organisations, NGOs, think-tanks, academia, business and the media. The Jam aims to develop innovative and concrete solutions to global security challenges.

The SDA welcomed high-ranking personalities from the world of security and defence, including US Defense Secretary Robert Gates. Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, Anders Fogh Rasmussen, Cecilia Malmström, Neelie Kroes, Pauline Neville-Jones, Alexander Vershbow, General James L. Jones, Elmar Mammadyarov and many others.

Advisory Board

The SDA received guidance from its Advisory Board, led by Jaap De Hoop Scheffer and Javier Solana.

Members included:[1]

The Director of the SDA was Giles Merritt, who is also Secretary-General of the think-tank Friends of Europe and Editor of the policy journal Europe's World.

gollark: There are something like... 16 stateless deterministic two-input binary logic gates, and maybe 81 or so ternary equivalents.
gollark: Many more logic gates, some of which are useful.
gollark: There are probably weird ternary logic gates too.
gollark: They have a bit of a monopolies problem I heard, though probably faster connections in some places.
gollark: Modern wired display connectors need at least gigabytes per second. The latest version of DisplayPort goes up to 80Gbps...

References

  1. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2013-03-13. Retrieved 2013-02-22.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
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