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Rather than examining only the civil or military side of the US
space program, as have many books in the past, "Space, the Dormant
Frontier" takes a unique look at the space program as a whole. Part
of the book's treatise is that the two communities must stop
ignoring each other if the US space program is to move forward
beyond being a science project, jobs program, or political
football. How the program got into its current, semi-desperate
state is also examined, as history has given space a legacy once
glorious, now an albatross. The authors include information and
analysis on the military and civil space programs, challenge the
perspective of the Washington Beltway analyst with vested interests
in the status quo, and make policy recommendations based on
realism, rather than idealism.
This book offers an accessible overview of the issues related to
the Women, Peace, and Security (WPS) global agenda. This new
edition has been updated and includes new chapters on WPS and
Environmental Change and on WPS in Regional and Security
Organizations. The 2nd edition provides explains Women, Peace and
Security as a security framework, different though related to both
gender equality as a social justice issue or a Diversity, Equity
and Inclusion issue. Within the context of the changing nature of
warfare, a complex and volatile global political climate, and
through consideration of empirical evidence, it examines the
definitions, theoretical underpinnings and methodological
challenges associated with implementing WPS. It then discusses with
more specificity violence against women, women civilians in war,
the role of women in peacemaking, women in the military and in
development, and women politicians, with new material on
environmental change and on regional and security organisations.
Examples and case studies draw from Africa, Asia, the Middle East,
Europe and North and South America. The need for more
sex-disaggregated data on every topic is emphasized throughout,
necessary to both demonstrate relationships between gender and
security and to identify solutions to problems. The book concludes
with a look to the future and number of action items from the macro
to the micro level. This book will be of much interest to students
of peace studies, security studies, gender studies and IR, as well
as professional military college students.
This book offers an accessible overview of the issues related to
the Women, Peace, and Security (WPS) global agenda. This new
edition has been updated and includes new chapters on WPS and
Environmental Change and on WPS in Regional and Security
Organizations. The 2nd edition provides explains Women, Peace and
Security as a security framework, different though related to both
gender equality as a social justice issue or a Diversity, Equity
and Inclusion issue. Within the context of the changing nature of
warfare, a complex and volatile global political climate, and
through consideration of empirical evidence, it examines the
definitions, theoretical underpinnings and methodological
challenges associated with implementing WPS. It then discusses with
more specificity violence against women, women civilians in war,
the role of women in peacemaking, women in the military and in
development, and women politicians, with new material on
environmental change and on regional and security organisations.
Examples and case studies draw from Africa, Asia, the Middle East,
Europe and North and South America. The need for more
sex-disaggregated data on every topic is emphasized throughout,
necessary to both demonstrate relationships between gender and
security and to identify solutions to problems. The book concludes
with a look to the future and number of action items from the macro
to the micro level. This book will be of much interest to students
of peace studies, security studies, gender studies and IR, as well
as professional military college students.
Written since January 2021, allowing inclusion of material and
analysis post-2020 election, the January 6, 2021 Capitol
insurrection, and the Cheney-Stefanik GOP leadership challenge.
Readability and cultural references make it of interest to a
practitioner/general interest audience, as well as undergraduates.
Written since January 2021, allowing inclusion of material and
analysis post-2020 election, the January 6, 2021 Capitol
insurrection, and the Cheney-Stefanik GOP leadership challenge.
Readability and cultural references make it of interest to a
practitioner/general interest audience, as well as undergraduates.
This book offers an accessible overview of the multiple,
interdependent issues related to the Women, Peace, and Security
(WPS) global agenda. The first introductory overview of the WPS
agenda as articulated in multiple national and international
resolutions, statements, and initiatives, the book provides a link
between the general public and security practitioners to an
important but still largely unknown set of global objectives
regarding gender equality and long-term peace and stability. Within
the context of the changing nature of warfare, and through
consideration of empirical evidence, the volume examines the
definitions, theoretical underpinnings and methodological
challenges associated with WPS. It then discusses with more
specificity violence against women, women civilians in war, the
role of women in peacemaking, women in the military and in
development, and women politicians. The book concludes with a look
to the future and number of action items from the macro to the
micro level. While challenges and opportunities related to the WPS
agenda are global, US policy action and inaction related to WPS and
gender equality are provided as examples of what politically needs
to be done, has been done, and obstacles to WPS furtherance
potentially to be encountered by all countries. This book will be
of much interest to students of peace studies, security studies,
gender studies and IR.
This book offers a detailed examination of the professional
military education system in the United States, from a critical,
insider's perspective. The mission of America's war colleges is to
educate senior military officers in both the ways of war and the
defence of peace. But are these colleges doing the best job
possible in carrying out that important mission? Military education
faces many demands, including a lack of preparation by the
students, uneven quality of the faculty, and confusion over the
curriculum. Many officers attend resident programs at the war
colleges programs against the career advice of their leadership,
despite the fact that they are virtually guaranteed graduation
after less than a year of study, while others do their best to
avoid it entirely. As the professional military education system
has come under increasing scrutiny and criticism, some have even
called for closing the war colleges. That answer, however, does not
serve the United States well, especially in a complex, globalized
environment, where military leaders need the best specialized
education to prepare them for their future challenges. This volume
examines the system that created and supports the perpetuation of
this system, and why it is imperative that it be fixed. Written by
a faculty member at a military college with twenty years'
experience of the PME system, this book will of much interest to
students of the US Military, US politics and military education in
general.
This book offers an accessible overview of the multiple,
interdependent issues related to the Women, Peace, and Security
(WPS) global agenda. The first introductory overview of the WPS
agenda as articulated in multiple national and international
resolutions, statements, and initiatives, the book provides a link
between the general public and security practitioners to an
important but still largely unknown set of global objectives
regarding gender equality and long-term peace and stability. Within
the context of the changing nature of warfare, and through
consideration of empirical evidence, the volume examines the
definitions, theoretical underpinnings and methodological
challenges associated with WPS. It then discusses with more
specificity violence against women, women civilians in war, the
role of women in peacemaking, women in the military and in
development, and women politicians. The book concludes with a look
to the future and number of action items from the macro to the
micro level. While challenges and opportunities related to the WPS
agenda are global, US policy action and inaction related to WPS and
gender equality are provided as examples of what politically needs
to be done, has been done, and obstacles to WPS furtherance
potentially to be encountered by all countries. This book will be
of much interest to students of peace studies, security studies,
gender studies and IR.
This book examines the recent shift in US space policy and the
forces that continually draw the US back into a space-technology
security dilemma. The dual-use nature of the vast majority of space
technology, meaning of value to both civilian and military
communities and being unable to differentiate offensive from
defensive intent of military hardware, makes space an area
particularly ripe for a security dilemma. In contrast to previous
administrations, the Obama Administration has pursued a less
militaristic space policy, instead employing a strategic restraint
approach that stressed multilateral diplomacy to space challenges.
The latter required international solutions and the United States,
subsequently, even voiced support for an International Code of
Conduct for Space. That policy held until the Chinese
anti-satellite (ASAT) test in 2013, which demonstrated expanded
Chinese capabilities. This volume explores the issues arising from
evolving space capabilities across the world and the security
challenges this poses. It subsequently discusses the complexity of
the space environment and argues that all tools of national power
must be used, with some degree of balance, toward addressing space
challenges and achieving space goals. This book will be of much
interest to students of space policy, defence studies, foreign
policy, security studies and IR.
This book examines the recent shift in US space policy and the
forces that continually draw the US back into a space-technology
security dilemma. The dual-use nature of the vast majority of space
technology, meaning of value to both civilian and military
communities and being unable to differentiate offensive from
defensive intent of military hardware, makes space an area
particularly ripe for a security dilemma. In contrast to previous
administrations, the Obama Administration has pursued a less
militaristic space policy, instead employing a strategic restraint
approach that stressed multilateral diplomacy to space challenges.
The latter required international solutions and the United States,
subsequently, even voiced support for an International Code of
Conduct for Space. That policy held until the Chinese
anti-satellite (ASAT) test in 2013, which demonstrated expanded
Chinese capabilities. This volume explores the issues arising from
evolving space capabilities across the world and the security
challenges this poses. It subsequently discusses the complexity of
the space environment and argues that all tools of national power
must be used, with some degree of balance, toward addressing space
challenges and achieving space goals. This book will be of much
interest to students of space policy, defence studies, foreign
policy, security studies and IR.
In the popular imagination, space is the final frontier. Will that
frontier be a wild west, or will it instead be treated as the
oceans are: as a global commons, where commerce is allowed to
flourish and no one country dominates? At this moment, nations are
free to send missions to Mars or launch space stations. Space
satellites are vital to many of the activities that have become
part of our daily lives-from weather forecasting to GPS and
satellite radio. The militaries of the United States and a host of
other nations have also made space a critical arena-spy and
communication satellites are essential to their operations.
Beginning with the Reagan administration and its attempt to create
a missile defense system to protect against attack by the Soviet
Union, the U.S. military has decided that the United States should
be the dominant power in space in order to protect civilian and
defense assets. In Heavenly Ambitions, Joan Johnson-Freese draws
from a myriad of sources to argue that the United States is on the
wrong path: first, by politicizing the question of space threats
and, second, by continuing to believe that military domination in
space is the only way to protect U.S. interests in space.
Johnson-Freese, who has written and lectured extensively on space
policy, lays out her vision of the future of space as a frontier
where nations cooperate and military activity is circumscribed by
arms control treaties that would allow no one nation to
dominate-just as no one nation's military dominates the world's
oceans. This is in the world's interest and, most important, in the
U.S. national interest.
This book offers a detailed examination of the professional
military education system in the United States, from a critical,
insider's perspective. The mission of America's war colleges is to
educate senior military officers in both the ways of war and the
defence of peace. But are these colleges doing the best job
possible in carrying out that important mission? Military education
faces many demands, including a lack of preparation by the
students, uneven quality of the faculty, and confusion over the
curriculum. Many officers attend resident programs at the war
colleges programs against the career advice of their leadership,
despite the fact that they are virtually guaranteed graduation
after less than a year of study, while others do their best to
avoid it entirely. As the professional military education system
has come under increasing scrutiny and criticism, some have even
called for closing the war colleges. That answer, however, does not
serve the United States well, especially in a complex, globalized
environment, where military leaders need the best specialized
education to prepare them for their future challenges. This volume
examines the system that created and supports the perpetuation of
this system, and why it is imperative that it be fixed. Written by
a faculty member at a military college with twenty years'
experience of the PME system, this book will of much interest to
students of the US Military, US politics and military education in
general.
Joan Johnson-Freese argues that the race for space weapons and
the U.S. quest for exclusive or at least dominant ownership of
strategic space assets have alienated the very allies that the
United States needs in order to maintain its leading role in space
exploration. Taking a balanced look at the issues that have
contributed to the decline of America's manned space program, such
as lack of political support and funding, Johnson-Freese offers not
only a critique but also a plan for enhancing U.S. space security
through cooperation rather than competition.
She begins with a brief overview of the history of international
space development through four eras: before "Sputnik," the space
race, after Apollo, and globalization. Then she focuses on how
policy changes of the mid-1990s have changed the nation, examining
why the United States has grown obsessed with the development of
space technology not just as a tool for globalization but as a
route toward expanding an already dominant arsenal of weapons.
Johnson-Freese claims that these policy choices have greatly
affected the attitudes and actions of other countries, and in the
fight to achieve security, the United States has instead put itself
at greater peril.
Johnson-Freese explains complex technical issues in clear,
accessible terms and suggests a way forward that is comprehensive
rather than partisan. America is not the only country with space
ambitions, but it is unique in viewing space as a battlefield and
the technological advancements of other nations as a dire threat.
Urgent and persuasive, "Space as a Strategic Asset" underscores the
danger of allowing our space program to languish and the crucial
role of cooperation in protecting the security of our country and
the world.
The Naval War College Review was established in 1948 and is a forum
for discussion of public policy matters of interest to the maritime
services. The forthright and candid views of the authors are
presented for the professional education of the readers. Articles
published are related to the academic and professional activities
of the Naval War College. They are drawn from a wide variety of
sources in order to inform, stimulate, and challenge readers, and
to serve as a catalyst for new ideas. Articles are selected
primarily on the basis of their intellectual and literary merits,
timeliness, and usefulness and interest to a wide readership. The
thoughts and opinions expressed in this publication are those of
the authors and are not necessarily those of the U.S. Navy
Department or the Naval War College.
With the easy-to-follow massage techniques in "The Healing Art of
Sports Massage," recreational athletes and pros alike can: Rub away
stiffness, one muscle at a time; improve flexibility and increase
circulation; recover more quickly from a pounding workout; overcome
post-exertion fatigue and soreness; and bounce back after hard
efforts (and achieve higher performance). Praised by Frank Shorter
(Gold Medalist, 1972 Olympic Marathon) as a book "destined to
become a classic. Joan's book shows athletes of every kind how to
perform at their peak and avoid injury."
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