The Daniel K. Inouye Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies (DKI APCSS) is a U.S. Department of Defense institute that officially opened Sept. 4, 1995, in Honolulu, Hawaii. DKI APCSS addresses regional and global security issues, inviting military and civilian representatives of the United States and Asia-Pacific nations to its comprehensive program of executive education and workshops, both in Hawaii and throughout the Indo-Pacific region.
The Center supports the Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Policy and the U.S. Indo-Pacific Command’s objective of developing professional and personal ties among national security establishments throughout the region. With a non-warfighting mission, the Center focuses on a multilateral and multi-dimensional approach to defining and addressing regional security issues and concerns. The most beneficial result is building relationships of trust and confidence among future leaders and decision-makers within the region.
DKI APCSS provides a focal point where national officials, decision makers and policy makers can gather to exchange ideas, explore pressing issues and achieve a greater understanding of the challenges that shape the security environment of the Indo-Pacific region. As well, the Center gives attention to the increasingly complex interrelationships of military, economic, political and diplomatic policies relevant to regional security issues through its three academic components: executive education, workshops and research and publications efforts.
Organizational Charter
Vision
A free and prosperous Indo-Pacific promoting collaborative, inclusive security.
Mission
DKI APCSS builds resilient capacity, shared understanding, and networked relationships among civilian and military practitioners and institutions to advance a free and open Indo-Pacific.
Approach
In support of the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD), the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Indo-Pacific Security Affairs (IPSA), and the Director, Defense Security Cooperation Agency (DSCA), and as a Mission Partner of the U.S. Indo-Pacific Command (USINDOPACOM), DKI APCSS will cultivate and maintain security networks that reinforce the rules-based international order. To this end, we will:
- Implement our mission through executive education that is practitioner-centric, activity-based, and technology-enabled.
- Facilitate the free exchange of ideas among security professionals and strengthen a conflict prevention framework.
- Address security comprehensively with a lens on traditional and non-traditional issues, opportunities, and challenges.
- Create inclusive, shared learning experiences through well-crafted programs and expert facilitation.
- Value knowledge, networks, and leadership tools as cooperation enablers.
- Build human capital as the means to produce policies and strategic plans for effective and
accountable security sectors and institutions. - Foster networks centered on our alumni as well as partnerships with educational institutions.
Guiding Principles:
Transparency: Foster an environment that encourages open and honest communication and processes.
Mutual Respect: Value perspectives that are different from our own.
Inclusion: Seek to involve the broadest range of stakeholders and ideas.
Value Proposition
DKI APCSS is recognized and respected for delivering practical outcomes that enhance security sector capacity and cooperation.
Website note: We recognize the proper use of the Hawaiian language including the ‘okina [‘], a glottal stop, and the kahakō [ō] or macron (e.g., in place names of Hawai‘i such as Lāna‘i). However, these have been omitted from this website for the best online experience for our visitors. We realize the importance and continue to use them outside of the online platform.