The Oxford Handbook of U.S. National Security
Edited by Derek S. Reveron, Nikolas K. Gvosdev, and John A. Cloud
Abstract
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Keywords:
national security,
foreign policy,
defense economics,
national interests,
grand strategy,
military,
foreign policy,
isolationism,
internationalism,
Jacksonian,
Wilsonian,
national interests,
grand strategy,
U.S. foreign policy,
hegemony,
international security,
U.S. foreign policy,
president,
presidential advisers,
bureaucracy,
Congress,
courts,
interest groups,
media,
public opinion,
civil-military relations,
civil-military gap,
civilian control of the military,
strategic assessment,
“Best Military Advice”,
Objective Control of the Military,
presidency,
national security advisor,
foreign policy,
interagency process,
multiple advocacy,
national security,
National Security Council,
U.S. foreign policy,
U.S. security policy,
National Security Advisor,
Interagency Process,
Presidential Decision-Making,
interagency,
national security,
foreign policy,
president,
national security council,
decision making,
intelligence history,
reform,
reorganization,
analysis,
intelligence-policy relations,
politicization,
Congress,
Senate,
House of Representatives,
legislation,
war powers,
budgets,
oversight,
national security,
diplomacy,
State Department,
foreign service,
civil service,
development,
foreign assistance,
aid,
Marshall Plan,
PEPFAR,
sanctions,
Obama,
Russia,
Iran,
geoeconomics,
political economy of security,
defense economics,
austerity,
war mobilization,
defense industrial base,
national security,
national security,
budget resources,
budget caps,
overseas contingency operations,
Office of Management and Budget (OMB),
appropriations committees,
force planning,
strategy,
defense,
capabilities-based planning,
civil-military relations,
civilian control,
anti-access,
area denial,
contested norms,
gray zone,
hybrid warfare,
joint force,
military operations,
persistent disorder,
third offset,
access,
alliances,
posture,
sustainment,
logistics,
power projection,
homeland security,
national security,
homeland defense,
emergency management,
terrorism,
natural disasters,
manmade disasters,
all hazards,
deterrence,
compellence,
Iran,
hostages,
nuclear program,
nuclear weapons,
deterrence,
nuclear posture review,
triad,
mutual assured destruction,
cyber conflict,
cyber security,
threat perceptions,
empirical evidence,
cyber norms,
cybersecurity,
encryption,
Crypto Wars,
Apple,
FBI,
space,
GPS,
dual-use technology,
space security,
space weapons,
Air Force,
space dominance,
space control,
global commons,
Outer Space Treaty,
human security,
national security,
failed states,
weak states,
new security agenda,
biodiversity,
carbon emissions,
climate change,
conflict,
desertification,
ecomigration,
environment,
global warming,
sustainable development,
structural violence,
symbolic violence,
ethnic conflict,
legitimacy,
political institutions,
Walter Benjamin,
Pierre Bourdieu,
Johan Galtung,
Carl Schmitt,
women,
gender,
political violence,
terrorism,
rebel groups,
female combatants,
militant,
extremism,
civil war,
terrorism,
counterterrorism,
political violence,
national security,
international security,
intra-state conflict,
threat inflation,
unipolarity,
political psychology,
neoconservatives,
fear,
rivalry,
crisis,
arms race,
recurrent conflict,
nonstate actors,
insurgency,
terrorism,
cybersecurity,
civil war,
strategy,
U.S.-China,
South China Sea,
East China Sea,
power,
security,
security dilemma,
trade,
identity,
institutions,
socialization,
Europe,
NATO,
European Union,
Russia,
alliance theory,
coalition warfare,
Ukraine,
Western Hemisphere,
history,
transnational threats,
drugs,
economic openness,
democracy,
human rights,
policy process,
tools of power,
multilateralism,
sanctions,
president,
national security
Bibliographic Information
- Publisher:
- Oxford University Press
- Print Publication Date:
- Jul 2018
- ISBN:
- 9780190680015
- Published online:
- Nov 2017
- DOI:
- 10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190680015.001.0001
Editors
Derek S. Reveron,
editor
Derek S. Reveron is a Professor of National Security Affairs at the U.S. Naval War College. He specializes in strategy development, non-state security challenges, and defense policy. He has authored or edited eleven books and is a faculty affiliate at the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs at Harvard Kennedy School. His recent books include: Exporting Security: International Engagement, Security Cooperation, and the Changing Face of the US Military and Human and National Security: Transnational Challenges. He teaches courses on grand strategy, foreign policy analysis, human security, and cybersecurity. He received an M.A. in Political Science and a Ph.D. in Public Policy Analysis from the University of Illinois at Chicago.
Nikolas K. Gvosdev,
editor
Nikolas K. Gvosdev is Professor of National Security Affairs at the U.S. Naval War College and the Jerome E. Levy Chair for Economic Geography. He was the Editor of The National Interest magazine and a Senior Fellow of Strategic Studies at The Nixon Center in Washington, DC. He was also associate director of the J.M. Dawson Institute of Church-State Studies at Baylor University and has served as an adjunct professor at Georgetown, George Washington, and Brown Universities. Dr. Gvosdev is the author or editor of a number of books, including, most recently, Communitarian Foreign Policy: Amitai Etzioni’s Vision, co-author of US Foreign Policy and Defense Strategy: The Rise of an Incidental Superpower, and co-author of Russian Foreign Policy: Interests, Vectors and Sectors. He received his doctorate from St Antony's College, Oxford University, where he studied on a Rhodes Scholarship.
John A. Cloud,
editor
Ambassador John A. Cloud is Professor of National Security Affairs and the William B. Ruger Chair of National Security Economics at the U.S. Naval War College. Ambassador Cloud is a specialist in European and economic issues who served as U.S. Ambassador to the Republic of Lithuania from August 2006 to July 2009. He previously served as the Deputy Chief of Mission at the United States Embassy in Berlin, Germany. Mr. Cloud was Special Assistant to the President and Senior Director for International Economic Affairs on the National Security Council staff from 2001-2003. Mr. Cloud was Deputy Chief of Mission at the U.S. Mission to the European Union from 1999 to 2001. From 1996 to 1999, Mr. Cloud served as the Deputy Chief of Mission at the American Embassy in Warsaw, Poland. He had earlier Foreign Service assignments in Germany, Poland, and Mexico. Mr. Cloud received his B.A. from the University of Connecticut in 1975 and his M.A. in International Affairs from George Washington University in 1977.