
The Sea in History - The Modern World
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Content
The Sea and Seapower within the International System - Paul Kennedy (Yale University)
Germany, 1870-1914: a military empire turns to the sea - Michael Epkenhans (Centre for Military History and Social Sciences of the Bundeswehr, Germany)
The Imperial Japanese Navy, 1937-1942 - Richard B. Frank (United States)
The US as a new naval power, 1890-1919 - Kenneth J. Hagan (U.S. Naval Academy)
World war suspended and resumed: Russia, 1919-1940 - Gunnar Åselius (Swedish Defence University)
Freedom and control of the seas, 1856-1919 - Gabriela A. Frei (University of Oxford)
UNCLOS and the Modern Law of the Sea - Sam Bateman (University of Wollongong)
New Navies and Maritime Powers - Steven Haines (University of Greenwich)
Britain, 1815-1850: naval power or sea power? - Andrew Lambert (King's College London)
Free trade, industrialization and the global economy, 1815-1914 - Kevin Hjortshøj O'Rourke (All Souls College, Oxford)
Coal and the Sea - Sarah Palmer (University of Greenwich)
Shipbuilding and Power: Some Reflections - Alan Lemmers (Netherlands Institute of Military History)
Maintaining Naval Hegemony in the Industrial Age: Britain, 1850-1889 - John F. Beeler (University of Alabama)
Naval Armaments Races, 1889-1922 - Jon Tetsuro Sumida (University of Maryland)
The British Empire and the War at Sea, 1914-1918 - David Stevens (Department of Defence, Canberra, Australia)
Steaming worldwide waters: adaptation and transformation in the Netherlands - Anita M.C. van Dissel (Leiden University)
Austria-Hungary: An Inland Empire Looks to the Sea - Lawrence Sondhaus (University of Indianapolis)
The Ottoman Empire and the sea, 1789-1922 - Colin Heywood (University of Hull)
Italy, 1861-1914: did the sea build a State and an Empire? - Francesco Zampieri (Naval Staff College, Italy)
Imperial failure of the industrial age: Spain, 1805-1898 - Jesús M. Valdaliso (University of the Basque Country)
Denmark, a small power with a growing shipping industry - Anders Monrad Møller (University of Copenhagen)
Sweden and the Sea in the 19th Century - Leos Müller (Stockholm University)
Navies, Internal Order and Trade in South America, 1830-1914 - Brian Vale (United Kingdom)
The Sea and the American Civil War - Craig L. Symonds (US Naval Academy)
The Wider Caribbean during the 19th and 20th centuries - Johanna von Grafenstein (Instituto Mora, Mexico)
Ship Canals - Graeme J. Milne (University of Liverpool)
Oil and Water - Patrick Alderton (United Kingdom)
Imperial failure in the industrial age: China, 1842-1911 - S.C.M. Paine (US Naval War College)
China Turns to the Sea: 1912-1990 - Bruce A. Elleman (US Naval War College)
India and the Sea - James Goldrick (University of New South Wales at Canberra)
Les îles d'Océanie et l'ouverture sur la mer à l'heure de la première mondialisation contemporaine - Claire Laux (Sciences Po Bordeaux)
Maritime Labour - Alastair Couper (Cardiff University)
Fisheries - Ingo Heidbrink (Old Dominion University, United States and University of Hull, United Kingdom)
Geographical Determinism and the Growth of the American Whaling and Sealing Industries - Michael P. Dyer (New Bedford Whaling Museum, United States)
La France et la mer 1815-1914 - Michèle Battesti (Institut de echerche stratégique de l'École militaire, Paris)
Russia tries the new naval technologies, 1815-1914 - Norman Saul (University of Kansas)
The First World War and Japan: from the Anglo-Japanese Alliance to the Washington Treaty - Yoichi Hirama (Japanese Maritime Self-Defense Force)
The Sea in the Great War - Avner Offer (University of Oxford)
The Mediterranean and World War I - Paul G. Halpern (Florida State University)
Germany in World War One: Naval Strategy and Warfare - Werner Rahn (Captain (ret.) of the German Navy)
The Sea in German Grand Strategy, 1919 - 1939/40 - Werner Rahn (Captain (ret.) of the German Navy)
The Case of Germany in the First Part of World War II - 1939-1942 - Jörg Hillmann (Captain in the German Navy attached to the European Defence Agency in Brussels)
Britain on the Defensive, 1939 -1942 - W.J.R. Gardner (Naval Historical Branch, Ministry of Defence, United Kingdom)
Britain and the Sea, 1943-45 - Christopher Baxter (Queen's University Belfast)
The Washington Treaty Era, 1919-1936: naval arms limitation - Phillips Payson O'Brien (London School of Economics)
The Washington Treaty Era: Neutralising the Pacific - Christopher M. Bell (Dalhousie University)
The United States and the Second World War - Nicholas Evan Sarantakes (US Naval War College)
The sea as a decisive factor in the Second World War - Evan Mawdsley (University of Glasgow)
The sea and the rise of the dictators: Italy, 1919--40 - MacGregor Knox (London School of Economics and Political Science)
The Italian Offensive, 1940 to 1941 - Simon Ball (University of Leeds)
The Sea and the Cold War - Norman Friedman (US Naval Institute)
NATO as a maritime alliance in the Cold War - Eric Grove (Society for Nautical Research and the Royal Historical Society, United Kingdom)
The Sea and the Soviet Empire - Colin S. Gray (University of Reading)
The sea and the economic slump, 1919-39 - Martin Daunton (University of Cambridge)
Océans et globalisation depuis 1945 - Hubert Bonin (Sciences Po Bordeaux and University of Bordeaux)
America's Pacific Power in a Global Age - Andrew Preston (University of Cambridge)
Les nouvelles ressources océaniques - Alain Beltran (CNRS, France)
Hiérarchies portuaires dans le monde et changements régionaux de connectivité maritime, 1890-2010 - César Ducruet (CNRS, France) and Bruno Marnot (University of La Rochelle)
Between empires and institutions: non-state actors and the sea since 1945 - Martin N. Murphy (King's College London)
The Narcotics Trade and the Sea - Peter Chalk (Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, California)
Climate Change and World Trade - Mark Maslin (University College London)
La France et la mer depuis 1945: une mutation inachevée - Philippe Vial (research department of the Defense Historical Department at the Ministry of Defense, France)
Changes in Naval Power and Seaborne Trade in Postwar Asian Waters - Geoffrey Till (King's College London)
Looking to the Future - Jeremy Black (University of Exeter)
Conclusion - N.A.M. Rodger (All Souls College, Oxford)
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