The Institute for National Defense and Security Research (INDSR) is a Taiwanese think tank based in Taipei. The InstituteâÂÂs mission is to safeguard Taiwan's democracy and prosperity by strengthening mutual understanding and advancing common interests in the global and Taiwanese defense and security community. The institute is operated under the auspices of the government and the Legislative Yuan and, as of 2019, has a NT$125 million (US$4.2 million) annual budget.
It is considered to be the top military think tank in Taiwan. While it receives almost all of its funding from government sources INDSR is institutionally independent, nonpartisan, and nonprofit.
The Institute for National Defense and Security Research was inaugurated in May 2018 by Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen, former minister of national defense Feng Shih-kuan and representatives from government, industry, academia, and civil society. It was founded with seven research departments, one research center, and 64 employees. To start the Institute hired 17 researchers (all with PhDs) and 17 research assistants.
The Defense Security Brief (DSB) (Ã¥ÂÂé²å®Âå ¨) is an English language publication focused on security and military affairs. It was founded in 2011 and was compiled and published by the Office of Defense Studies, Ministry of National Defense until it was transferred to INDSR in 2018.
The Defense Strategy and Assessment Journal (æÂ°çÂ¥èÂÂè©Âä¼°) is a quarterly Chinese-language journal for defense and security research.
The Defense Situation Monthly (Ã¥ÂÂé²æÂ å¢æÂÂå ±) is a monthly newsletter authored by INDSR experts.
The Defense Security Weekly(Ã¥ÂÂé²å®Âå ¨é±報) is a weekly newsletter offering longer-form analysis by INDSR experts about news, security issues and trends of the preceding week. Distributed internally to government agencies and lawmakers.
The Defense Security News (Ã¥ÂÂé²å®Âå ¨æÂ°èÂÂ) is a daily that focuses on global headlines and developments concerning China. Distributed internally to government agencies and lawmakers.