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The original 1944 G.I. Bill holds a special place in the American
imagination. In popular mythology, it stands as the capstone of the
Greatest Generation narrative of World War II, a fitting reward for
the nation's heroes. Given the almost universal acclaim afforded
the bill, future generations of warriors might well have expected
to receive similar remuneration for their sacrifice. But when
soldiers of the Vietnam conflict shed their fatigues and returned
home to civilian life, they found that their G.I. Bills fell well
short of what many of them believed they had earned.In this first
legislative history of the G.I. Bill during the Vietnam Era, Mark
Boulton takes the story of veterans' politics beyond the 1944 G.I.
Bill as he seeks to uncover the reasons why Vietnam veterans were
less well compensated than their predecessors. In crafting their
legislation, both conservative and liberal politicians of the
Vietnam era wrestled with fundamental questions about the
obligations of American citizenship. What does it mean to serve
one's country? What does society owe those civilians it puts in
uniform? Repeatedly, in answering those questions, lawmakers from
both ends of the political spectrum found reasons to curb the
generosity of the benefits offered.The G.I. Bills should play a
central role in our understanding of the Vietnam veteran's
post-service lives, just as they do for World War II veterans.
Taking the story of the G.I. Bills beyond the World War II
generation allows for a more complete understanding of the veteran
experience in America.
Though it ended more than thirty years ago, the Cold War still
casts a long shadow over American society. Red Reckoning examines
how the great ideological conflict of the twentieth century
transformed the nation and forced Americans to reconsider almost
every aspect of their society, culture, and identity. Using an
interdisciplinary approach, the volume's contributors examine a
broad array of topics, including the Cold War's impact on national
security, race relations, gun culture and masculinity, law, college
football, advertising, music, film, free speech, religion, and even
board games. Above all, Red Reckoning brings a vitally important
era back to life for those who lived through it and for students
and scholars wishing to understand it.
Security studies, also known as international security studies, is
an academic subfield within the wider discipline of international
relations that examines organized violence, military conflict, and
national security. Meant to serve as an introduction to the field
of security studies, Contextualizing Security is a collection of
original essays, primary source lectures, and previously published
material in the overlapping fields of security studies, political
science, sociology, journalism, and philosophy. It offers both
graduate and undergraduate students a grasp on both foundational
issues and more contemporary debates in security studies. Nineteen
chapters cover security studies in the context of homeland security
and liberty, U.S. foreign policy, lessons from the Cold War,
science and technology policy, drones, cybersecurity, the War on
Terror, migration, study-abroad programs, the surveillance state,
Africa, and China. CONTRIBUTORS: Amelia Ayers, James E. Baker, Roy
D. Blunt, Mark Boulton, Naji Bsisu, Robert E. Burnett, Daniel Egbe,
Laila Farooq, Lisa Fein, Anna Holyan, Jeh C. Johnson, Richard
Ledgett, David L. McDermott, James McRae, Amanda Murdie, Bernie
Sanders, Jeremy Scahill, Kristan Stoddart, Jeremy Brooke Straughn,
J. R. Swanegan, and Kali Wright-Smith
Security studies, also known as international security studies, is
an academic subfield within the wider discipline of international
relations that examines organized violence, military conflict, and
national security. Meant to serve as an introduction to the field
of security studies, Contextualizing Security is a collection of
original essays, primary source lectures, and previously published
material in the overlapping fields of security studies, political
science, sociology, journalism, and philosophy. It offers both
graduate and undergraduate students a grasp on both foundational
issues and more contemporary debates in security studies. Nineteen
chapters cover security studies in the context of homeland security
and liberty, U.S. foreign policy, lessons from the Cold War,
science and technology policy, drones, cybersecurity, the War on
Terror, migration, study-abroad programs, the surveillance state,
Africa, and China. CONTRIBUTORS: Amelia Ayers, James E. Baker, Roy
D. Blunt, Mark Boulton, Naji Bsisu, Robert E. Burnett, Daniel Egbe,
Laila Farooq, Lisa Fein, Anna Holyan, Jeh C. Johnson, Richard
Ledgett, David L. McDermott, James McRae, Amanda Murdie, Bernie
Sanders, Jeremy Scahill, Kristan Stoddart, Jeremy Brooke Straughn,
J. R. Swanegan, and Kali Wright-Smith
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