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Editorial

From the editors

 

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Notes

1 Caitlin Talmadge and Joshua Rovner, ‘The Meaning of China’s Nuclear Revolution’, The Journal of Strategic Studies 46/6–7 (2023). doi:10.1080/01402390.2023.2212871.

2 Joel Wuthnow and M. Taylor Fravel, ‘China’s Military Strategy for a “New Era”: Some Change, More Continuity, and Tantalizing Hints’, The Journal of Strategic Studies 46/6–7 (2023). doi: 10.1080/01402390.2022.2043850.

3 Ketian Zhang, ‘Explaining China’s Large-Scale Land Reclamation in the South China Sea: Timing and Rationale’, The Journal of Strategic Studies 46/6–7 (2023). doi:10.1080/01402390.2022.2040486.

4 Jaganath Sankaran, ‘State or Soldier? Explaining China’s Decisionmaking in India-China Border Crises’, The Journal of Strategic Studies 46/6–7 (2023). doi:10.1080/01402390.2023.2212133.

5 Hugo Meijer, ‘Pulled East: The Rise of China, Europe, and French Security Policy in the Asia-Pacific’, The Journal of Strategic Studies 46/6–7 (2023). doi:10.1080/01402390.2021.1935251.

6 Audrye Wong, Leif-Eric Easley, and Hsin-Wei Tang, ‘Mobilizing Patriotic Consumers: China’s New Strategy of Economic Coercion’, The Journal of Strategic Studies 46/6–7 (2023). doi:10.1080/01402390.2023.2205262.

7 See also Aaron Bateman, ‘Mutually Assured Surveillance at Risk: Anti-Satellite Weapons and Cold War Arms Control’, Journal of Strategic Studies 45/1 (2022), 119–42; and Jeffrey H. Michaels, ‘Visions of the next war or reliving the last one? Early alliance views of war with the Soviet Bloc’, Journal of Strategic Studies 43/6–7 (2020), 990–1013.

8 Nicholas L. Miller and Tristan A. Volpe, ‘The Rise of the Autocratic Nuclear Marketplace’, The Journal of Strategic Studies 46/6–7 (2023). doi:10.1080/01402390.2022.2052725. See also Rabinowitz, Or & Sarkar, Jayita, ‘“It isn’t over until the fuel cell sings”: A reassessment of the US and French pledges of nuclear assistance in the 1970s’, Journal of Strategic Studies 41/1–2 (2018), 275–300.

9 Adam B. Young, ‘Tracing the Origins of the First Strategic Stealth Bomber: Untangling the Interaction between Strategy, Bureaucracy, Politics, and Technology’, The Journal of Strategic Studies 46/6–7 (2023). doi:10.1080/01402390.2023.2186818.

10 Wyn Rees & Azriel Bermant, “Nuclear Divergence Between Britain and the United States: SDI and the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty, The Journal of Strategic Studies 46/6–7 (2023). doi:10.1080/01402390.2021.1907745. See also Timothy Andrews Sayle, ‘A Nuclear Education: The Origins of Nato’s Nuclear Planning Group’, Journal of Strategic Studies 43/6–7 (2020), 920–56.

11 Beatrice Heuser, ‘Fortuna, Chance, Risk and Opportunity in Strategy from Antiquity to the Nuclear Age’, The Journal of Strategic Studies 46/6–7 (2023). doi:10.1080/01402390.2022.2111306.

12 Samuel Zilincik, ‘Awe for Strategic Effect: Hardly Worth the Trouble’, The Journal of Strategic Studies 46/6–7 (2023). doi:10.1080/01402390.2022.2138355.

13 John Stone, ‘Montesquieu: Strategist Ahead of his Time’, The Journal of Strategic Studies 46/6–7 (2023). doi:10.1080/01402390.2022.2160713.

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