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Editorial

From the Editors

 

Notes

1 Thomas G. Mahnken, ‘Andrew W. Marshall: In Memoriam’, War on the Rocks, 8 Apr. 2019, available at https://warontherocks.com/2019/04/andrew-w-marshall-in-memoriam/; Thomas G. Mahnken (ed.), Net Assessment and Military Strategy: Retrospective and Prospective Essays (Amherst NY: Cambria Press2020).

2 Recent work on military innovation includes Tor Bukkvoll, ‘Military Innovation Under Authoritarian Government – the Case of Russian Special Operations Forces’, The Journal of Strategic Studies 38/5 (2015), 602–25; Tai Ming Cheung, ‘Innovation in China’s Defense Technology Base: Foreign Technology and Military Capabilities’, The Journal of Strategic Studies 39/5–6 (2016), 728–61; Daniel Fiott, ‘A Revolution Too Far? US Defence Innovation, Europe and NATO’s Military-Technological Gap’, The Journal of Strategic Studies 40/3 (2017), 417–37; Stuart Griffin, ‘Military Innovation Studies: Multidisciplinary or Lacking Discipline?’ The Journal of Strategic Studies 40/1–2 (2017), 196–224; Adam M. Jungdahl & Julia M. Macdonald, ‘Innovation Inhibitors in War: Overcoming Obstacles in the Pursuit of Military Effectiveness’, The Journal of Strategic Studies 38/4 (2015), 467–99; Nina A. Kollars, ‘War’s Horizon: Soldier-Led Adaptation in Iraq and Vietnam’, The Journal of Strategic Studies 38/4 (2015), 529–53; and Raphael D. Marcus, ‘Military Innovation and Tactical Adaptation in the Israel–Hizballah Conflict: The Institutionalization of Lesson-Learning in the IDF’, The Journal of Strategic Studies 38/4 (2015), 500–28.

3 See, for example, Dmitry (Dima) Adamsky, ‘From Moscow with coercion: Russian deterrence theory and strategic culture’, The Journal of Strategic Studies 41/1–2 (2018), 33–60 and Dmitry (Dima) Adamsky, ‘Russian Campaign in Syria – Change and Continuity in Strategic Culture’, The Journal of Strategic Studies 43/1 (2020), 104–25.

4 Additional recent work on grand strategy includes Hal Brands & Peter Feaver, ‘The Case for Bush Revisionism: Reevaluating the Legacy of America’s 43rd President’, The Journal of Strategic Studies 41/1–2 (2018), 234–274; Hal Brands & William Inboden, ‘Wisdom Without Tears: Statecraft and the Uses of History’, The Journal of Strategic Studies 41/7 (2018), 916–946; Thomas P. Cavanna, ‘Geopolitics Over Proliferation: The Origins of US Grand Strategy and Their Implications for the Spread of Nuclear Weapons in South Asia’, The Journal of Strategic Studies 41/4 (2018), 576–603; Michael Clarke & Anthony Ricketts, ‘Did Obama have a grand strategy?’ The Journal of Strategic Studies 40/1–2 (2017), 295–324; Isabelle Duyvesteyn & James E. Worrall, ‘Global Strategic Studies: A Manifesto’, The Journal of Strategic Studies 40/3 (2017), 347–57; Ionut C. Popescu, ‘Grand Strategy vs. Emergent Strategy in the conduct of foreign policy’, The Journal of Strategic Studies 41/3 (2018), 438–60; Doug Stokes & Kit Waterman, ‘Beyond balancing? Intrastate Conflict and US Grand Strategy’, The Journal of Strategic Studies 41/6 (2018), 824–49; Hew Strachan, ‘Strategy in Theory; Strategy in Practice’, The Journal of Strategic Studies 42/2 (2019), 171–90; and Pascal Vennesson, ‘Is Strategic Studies Narrow? Critical Security and The Misunderstood Scope of Strategy’, The Journal of Strategic Studies 40/3 (2017), 358–91.

5 Recent scholarship on strategy and Clausewitz includes Kareem Ayoub & Kenneth Payne, ‘Strategy in the Age of Artificial Intelligence’, The Journal of Strategic Studies 39/5–6 (2016), 793–819; Antulio J. Echevarria II, ‘Hostility and War, Small or Otherwise’, The Journal of Strategic Studies 40/3 (2017), 443–449; Timothy D. Hoyt, ‘Clausewitz and Small Wars: The Conceptual Origins of the “Remarkable Trinity”’, The Journal of Strategic Studies 40/3 (2017), 438–442; Jack S. Levy, ‘Clausewitz and People’s War’, The Journal of Strategic Studies 40/3 (2017), 450–6; Paul Schuurman, ‘What-If at Waterloo. Carl von Clausewitz’s Use of Historical Counterfactuals in his History of the Campaign of 1815’, The Journal of Strategic Studies 40/7 (2017), 1016–38.

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