Drawing upon a wide range of interviews with many of the key
actors, Andrew Dorman examines how defence policy was formulated
and implemented during the premiership of Margaret Thatcher. This
period witnessed major transformations in international and
domestic politics, with defence emerging from its traditional
postwar position of relative insignificance to become one of the
key issues at the 1983 and 1987 general elections. Dorman provides
a new understanding of policymaking by analysing defence policy in
terms of three constituent parts: declaratory policy; military
strategy and procurement policy.
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