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Articles

The changing norms of civil and military and civil-military relations theory

Pages 224-236 | Published online: 30 Apr 2013
 

Abstract

The dichotomy between civil and military is well-established in international political practice. International law, international order, and war are but some of the institutions that rely upon making a distinction between civil and military. The distinction, arguably, is also central for analyses of conflicts worldwide. Almost daily, we are fed stories of atrocities against civilians in conflict-ridden parts of the world. In academic discourse, similarly, several fields of study including most of the debate centering on interpreting modern war relies upon a distinction between civil and military. Both research and practice, however, tend to treat these categories as fixed and global. In this article, I argue – to the contrary – that what constitutes civil and military are malleable norms. This forms a particular challenge to analyses of civil–military relations and it calls for a different categorization of civil–military relations in Weberian ideal types.

Notes

 1. CitationRoberts, ‘The Civilian in Modern War’, 358–361.

 2. CitationEgnell ‘Between Reluctance and Necessity’, 231–257.

 3. CitationSinger, Corporate Warriors; CitationAvant, The Market for Force; CitationCarafano, Private Sector, Public Wars.

 4. CitationHildebrandt, Krigare, 337–338.

 5. See e.g. CitationBarany, The Soldier and the Changing State.

 6. See e.g. CitationHuntington, The Soldier and the State; CitationJanowitz, The Professional Soldier; CitationNielsen and Snider, American Civil-Military Relations; CitationBebler, Civil-Military Relations in Post-Communist States; CitationKümmel ‘The Winds of Change’; CitationStrachan, ‘The Civil-Military Gap in Britain’; CitationVennesson, ‘Civil-Military Relations in France’.

 7. CitationFeaver, Armed Servants.

 8. See e.g. CitationKaldor, New and Old Wars; CitationValentino, Final Solutions; CitationKalyvas, Logic of Violence in Civil Wars; CitationEck and Hultman, ‘One-Sided Violence against Civilians’; CitationDownes, Targeting Civilians in War; CitationSlim, Killing Civilians; CitationMelander et al., ‘Are “New Wars” More Atrocious?’

 9. See e.g. CitationEgnell, Complex Peace Operations; CitationStone, Military Strategy; CitationBetts, American Force.

10. See e.g. CitationBorn, ‘Democratic Control of Armed Forces’, 151–165; CitationBurk, ‘Theories of Democratic Civil-Military Relations’.

11. CitationVan de Goor et al., ‘Introduction’, 1–6.

12. Katzenstein, ‘Introduction’, 5.

13. Van Creveld, The Culture of War, 158.

14. CitationLutterbeck, ‘Between Police and Military’; CitationWeiss, ‘The Blurring Border’.

15. Roberts, ‘The Civilian in Modern War’, 358.

16. CitationLarsdotter, ‘New Wars, Old Warfare?’, 139.

17. This is documented in a host of books by embedded journalists. See e.g. CitationSteele, Ghosts of Afghanistan; CitationJunger, War.

18. Roberts ‘The Civilian in Modern War’, 358.

19. CitationBrand, Roman Military Law.

20. CitationLebow, Tragic Vision of Politics.

21. See e.g. CitationJohnston ‘Does Decapitation Work?’; CitationPrice ‘Targeting Top Terrorists’.

22. CitationSmith, The Utility of Force; CitationAngström and Duyesteyn, Modern War.

23. CitationBiddle et al., ‘Testing the Surge’.

24. Roberts, ‘The Civilian in Modern War’.

25. Egnell, ‘Between Reluctance and Necessity’, 231–257; cf. CitationSpear and Williams, Security and Development.

26. Huntington, The Soldier and the State.

27. CitationCohen, Supreme Command.

28. CitationMargolis, War at the Top of the World, 12.

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