The Soldier and the State: Difference between revisions
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imported>Howard C. Berkowitz No edit summary |
imported>Howard C. Berkowitz |
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===Germany and Japan=== | ===Germany and Japan=== | ||
==Part 2, Military Power in America (1798-1940)== | ==Part 2, Military Power in America (1798-1940)== | ||
===The Ideological Constant=== | |||
===The Structural Constant=== | |||
===Before the Civil War=== | |||
===Creating the American Military Profession=== | |||
===Failure of the Neo-Hamiltonian Compromise=== | |||
===Constancy of Interwar Civil-Military Relations=== | |||
==Part 3, The Crisis of American Civil-Military Relations (1940-1955)== | ==Part 3, The Crisis of American Civil-Military Relations (1940-1955)== | ||
==References== | ==References== | ||
{{reflist}} | {{reflist}} |
Revision as of 13:28, 13 July 2010
The Soldier and the State: the Theory and Politics of Civil-Military Relations is a 1957 book by Samuel Huntington, is one of the formative works in the field of military sociology.[1]
Part 1, Military Institutions and the State
Officership as a Profession
The Rise of the Military Profession
The Military Mind
Power, Professionalism and Ideology
Germany and Japan
Part 2, Military Power in America (1798-1940)
The Ideological Constant
The Structural Constant
Before the Civil War
Creating the American Military Profession
Failure of the Neo-Hamiltonian Compromise
Constancy of Interwar Civil-Military Relations
Part 3, The Crisis of American Civil-Military Relations (1940-1955)
References
- ↑ Samuel Huntington (1957), The Soldier and the State: the Theory and Politics of Civil-Military Relations (1964 Vintage Edition ed.), Harvard University