Security and Arms Control
Volume 1: A Guide to National Policymaking
Greenwood Press
Published on 24. March 1989
Book
Hardback
322 pages
978-0-313-25257-0 (ISBN)
Description
This book, the first in a two-volume set, is organized around the idea that national and international security and arms control studies are interdisciplinary fields of study. Together, the volumes give form and substance to these emerging fields. This first volume is concerned with broad analytical perspectives that are relevant to the security and arms control considerations of any national government. subfield to assist more in-depth analysis by researchers and
Volume 1 is divided into four parts. The first identifies those characteristics of the international system that condition the use of or the threat to use force. It also explores those aspects of the system that prompt the need for ways to control violence and to discipline it to the national purpose. Twelve functions of national strategic policy are covered in parts two and three. A final section reviews ways that might be used to go beyond violence or threats in coping with human conflict. Through the topics selected for inclusion, the guide attempts to define the scope of security and arms control studies as a serious field of systematic inquiry. It identifies major problems, key concepts, methods, disciplinary approaches, intellectual styles, and data sources associated with the principal subfields of the discipline. It critically reviews and evaluates the most important literature associated with each subfield to assist more in-depth analysis by researchers and policymakers.
Volume 1 is divided into four parts. The first identifies those characteristics of the international system that condition the use of or the threat to use force. It also explores those aspects of the system that prompt the need for ways to control violence and to discipline it to the national purpose. Twelve functions of national strategic policy are covered in parts two and three. A final section reviews ways that might be used to go beyond violence or threats in coping with human conflict. Through the topics selected for inclusion, the guide attempts to define the scope of security and arms control studies as a serious field of systematic inquiry. It identifies major problems, key concepts, methods, disciplinary approaches, intellectual styles, and data sources associated with the principal subfields of the discipline. It critically reviews and evaluates the most important literature associated with each subfield to assist more in-depth analysis by researchers and policymakers.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
United States
Publishing group
Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Target group
College/higher education
ISBN-13
978-0-313-25257-0 (9780313252570)
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Schweitzer Classification
Persons
EDWARD A. KOLODZIEJ is Professor of Political Science and Director of the Program in Arms Control, Disarmament and International Security at the University of Illinois, Urbana. He is the author of French International Policy Under DeGaulle and Pompidou, The Uncommon Defense and Congress, 1945-1963, and Making and Marketing Arms: The French Experience and the Implications for the International System.
PATRICK M. MORGAN is Professor of Political Science at Washington State University. Among the books he has written are Deterrence: A Conceptual Analysis, Theories and Approaches to International Politics, and Strategic Military Surprise.
PATRICK M. MORGAN is Professor of Political Science at Washington State University. Among the books he has written are Deterrence: A Conceptual Analysis, Theories and Approaches to International Politics, and Strategic Military Surprise.