Notes
12011 JCR Social Science Edition, <http://thomsonreuters.com/products_services/science/science_products/a-z/journal_citation_reports/>.
2For earlier essays on this and related topics, see Michael S. Chase, Andrew W. Erickson, and Christopher Yeaw, ‘Chinese Theater and Strategic Missile Force Modernization and its Implications for the United States’, Journal of Strategic Studies 32/1 (Feb. 2009), 67–114; Tai Ming Cheung, ‘Dragon on the Horizon: China's Defense Industrial Renaissance’, Journal of Strategic Studies 32/1 (Feb. 2009), 29–66; Tai Ming Cheung, ‘The Chinese Defense Economy's Long March from Imitation to Innovation’, Journal of Strategic Studies 34/3 (June 2011), 325–54; Thomas G. Mahnken, ‘China's Anti-Access Strategy in Historical and Theoretical Perspective’, Journal of Strategic Studies 34/3 (June 2011), 299–323; Samm Tyroler-Cooper and Alison Peet, ‘The Chinese Aviation Industry: Techno-Hybrid Patterns of Development in the C919 Program’, Journal of Strategic Studies 34/3 (June 2011), 383–404; Eric Hagt and Matthew Durnin, ‘Space, China's Tactical Frontier,’ Journal of Strategic Studies 34/5 (Oct. 2011), 733–61.
3Earlier articles on this theme include Theo Farrell, ‘Improving in War: Military Adaptation and the British in Helmand Province, Afghanistan, 2006–2009’, Journal of Strategic Studies 33/4 (Aug. 2010), 567–94; James A. Russell, ‘Innovation in War: Counterinsurgency Operations in Anbar and Ninewa Provinces, Iraq, 2005–2007’, Journal of Strategic Studies 33/4 (Aug. 2010), 595–624 and Paul Dixon, ‘“Hearts and Minds”? British Counter-Insurgency from Malaya to Iraq’, Journal of Strategic Studies 32/3 (2009), 353–81.
4Sarah E. Kreps and Matthew Fuhrmann, ‘Attacking the Atom: Does Bombing Nuclear Facilities Affect Proliferation?’ Journal of Strategic Studies 34/2 (April 2011), 161–87.