The end of the Cold War and its impact on defense spending has created a strong need to reform Department of Defense’s (DOD) acquisition system. With procurement spending down, DOD expects to depend on savings from acquisition reform to help finance future force modernization. Policymakers believe that DOD should use more commercial products because, in many instances, they cost less and their quality is comparable to products built according to DOD military specifications. Many such reform proposals are based on recognition that DOD regulatory barriers and a Cold War acquisition “culture” have inhibited the introduction of commercial products
Many in the Department of Defense associate the phase "acquisition reform" with major policy and leg...
This qualitative study analyzes how well recent acquisitions reform policies have addressed the mode...
This report, the latest in an annual series, examines the trends in what the U.S. Department of Defe...
The end of the Cold War and its impact on defense spending has created a strong need to reform Depar...
Research conducted for this joint applied project attempted to determine which policies should be pu...
This report outlines the Department of Defense's (DOD) defense acquisition structure, discusses rece...
DOD reduced force structure after the Cold War ended. More efficient and sophisticated weapons are n...
The United States continues to develop and deploy the best weapons systems in the world. However, th...
Continuous improvement continues to be the rallying point for Department of Defense (DoD) acquisitio...
A letter report issued by the Government Accountability Office with an abstract that begins "The Dep...
Excerpt from the Proceedings of the Nineteenth Annual Acquisition Research SymposiumGAO is in the mi...
Although the bottom is not about to fall out of the military market, a tough period of belt tighteni...
Excerpt from the Proceedings of the Nineteenth Annual Acquisition Research SymposiumThis report is t...
The article begins with a brief discussion of the origins of the 5000 documents. Then the author ana...
The full funding policy is a federal budgeting rule imposed on DOD by Congress in the 1950s that req...
Many in the Department of Defense associate the phase "acquisition reform" with major policy and leg...
This qualitative study analyzes how well recent acquisitions reform policies have addressed the mode...
This report, the latest in an annual series, examines the trends in what the U.S. Department of Defe...
The end of the Cold War and its impact on defense spending has created a strong need to reform Depar...
Research conducted for this joint applied project attempted to determine which policies should be pu...
This report outlines the Department of Defense's (DOD) defense acquisition structure, discusses rece...
DOD reduced force structure after the Cold War ended. More efficient and sophisticated weapons are n...
The United States continues to develop and deploy the best weapons systems in the world. However, th...
Continuous improvement continues to be the rallying point for Department of Defense (DoD) acquisitio...
A letter report issued by the Government Accountability Office with an abstract that begins "The Dep...
Excerpt from the Proceedings of the Nineteenth Annual Acquisition Research SymposiumGAO is in the mi...
Although the bottom is not about to fall out of the military market, a tough period of belt tighteni...
Excerpt from the Proceedings of the Nineteenth Annual Acquisition Research SymposiumThis report is t...
The article begins with a brief discussion of the origins of the 5000 documents. Then the author ana...
The full funding policy is a federal budgeting rule imposed on DOD by Congress in the 1950s that req...
Many in the Department of Defense associate the phase "acquisition reform" with major policy and leg...
This qualitative study analyzes how well recent acquisitions reform policies have addressed the mode...
This report, the latest in an annual series, examines the trends in what the U.S. Department of Defe...