Items where Subject is "U Military Science (General)"

Library of Congress subjects (102130) U Military Science (473) U Military Science (General) (463)
Number of items at this level: 463.
2025
  • Broache, M.P., Cronin-Furman, Kate, Lake, Milli, Yu, Agnes (2025). The uncounted dead: statist bias and civilian targeting in conflict data. Journal of Global Security Studies, 10(3). https://doi.org/10.1093/jogss/ogaf013 picture_as_pdf
  • Holvikivi, Aiko (2025). An ‘ironic compromise’: feminist research in military institutions. Critical Military Studies, https://doi.org/10.1080/23337486.2025.2583759 picture_as_pdf
  • Sukin, Lauren, Kelloway, Charlotte (4 December 2025) Lauren Sukin "The story of warfare throughout history is really a story of technology". LSE European Politics and Policy (EUROPP) blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Theros, Marika (2025). Illusions of control: dilemmas in managing U.S. proxy forces in Afghanistan, Iraq, and Syria. International Affairs, 101(4), 1542 - 1544. https://doi.org/10.1093/ia/iiaf117
  • Ware, Vron, Dawes, Antonia Lucia, Pariyar, Mitra, Cree, Alice (2025). England's military heartland: preparing for war on Salisbury Plain. Manchester University Press.
  • 2024
  • Allen, Tim, Parker, Melissa (2024). In the line of duty: militarising African epidemics. Global Policy, 15(S4), 97 - 108. https://doi.org/10.1111/1758-5899.13297 picture_as_pdf
  • Chernov-Hwang, Julie, Schulze, Kirsten E. (2024). Indonesian jihadi training camps: home and away. Studies in Conflict and Terrorism, https://doi.org/10.1080/1057610X.2023.2296235 picture_as_pdf
  • Farrell-Vinay, Peter (2024). Lethal dialectic - the evolution of battle planning in the BEF 1915-1916 [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. https://doi.org/10.21953/lse.00004643
  • Fiala, Lukas (2024). China's strategic arsenal: worldview, doctrine, and systems. Edited by James M. Smith and Paul J. Bolt. Pacific Affairs, 97(4), 849 - 851.
  • Karamanis, Dimitrios (2024). Defence partnerships and economic dynamics: an analysis in PESCO countries. Defence and Peace Economics, https://doi.org/10.1080/10242694.2024.2378566
  • Parry, Jonathan (2024). The ethics of humanitarian intervention: an introduction. Routledge.
  • Parry, Jonathan, Easton, Christina (5 March 2024) Military recruitment is a moral minefield. British Politics and Policy at LSE. picture_as_pdf
  • Parry, Jonathan (2024). Intervention and consent. In The Ethics of Humanitarian Intervention: An Introduction . Routledge. picture_as_pdf
  • Schouten, Peer, Gallien, Max, Thakur, Shalaka, Van Den Boogaard, Vanessa, Weigand, Florian (2024). The politics of passage: roadblocks, taxation and control in conflict. (DIIS Working Paper series: Roadblocks and revenues 01). Danish Institute for International Studies.
  • 2023
  • Coker, Christopher (2023). Thinking about the future of war. In Gruszczak, Artur, Kaempf, Sebastian (Eds.), Routledge Handbook of the Future of Warfare (pp. 31 - 40). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003299011-5
  • Duxbury, Catherine (2023). Biological weapons testing at Porton Down: the strategic effacement of nonhuman animals, 1947–1955. Humanimalia, 14(1), 347 - 379. https://doi.org/10.52537/humanimalia.12804 picture_as_pdf
  • Halem, Harry (2023). Ukraine’s lessons for future combat: unmanned aerial systems and deep strike. The US Army War College Quarterly: Parameters, 53(4), 19 - 32. https://doi.org/10.55540/0031-1723.3252 picture_as_pdf
  • Han, David (2023). The role of the Malaysian armed forces in defence diplomacy: a foreign policy outworking of civil-military relations in Malaysia. In Chong, Alan, Jenne, Nicole (Eds.), Asian Military Evolutions: Civil-Military Relations in Asia (pp. 110 - 128). Bristol University Press.
  • Juling, Dominik (2023). Future bioterror and biowarfare threats for NATO’s Armed Forces until 2030. Journal of Advanced Military Studies, 14(1), 118 - 143. https://doi.org/10.21140/mcuj.20231401005 picture_as_pdf
  • Mayoux, Chloe (2023). Atomic junction: nuclear power in Africa after independence. Journal of African Military History, 7(1-2), 159-162. https://doi.org/10.1163/24680966-TAT00003
  • Motadel, David (2023). Is Prussian militarism a myth? The New York Review of Books, 70(16).
  • Parry, Jonathan, Easton, Christina (2023). Filling the ranks: moral risk and the ethics of military recruitment. American Political Science Review, https://doi.org/10.1017/S0003055423001247 picture_as_pdf
  • Patterson Perkins, Ariel Ann (2023). Private defense as a public good: threat, trust, and emotive pathways to armed mobilization in the United States [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. https://doi.org/10.21953/lse.00004676
  • 2022
  • Bahiss, Ibrahim, Jackson, Ashley, Mayhew, Leigh, Weigand, Florian (2022). Rethinking armed group control: towards a new conceptual framework. (Centre for Study of Armed Groups Working Paper). Overseas Development Institute (ODI). picture_as_pdf
  • Certo, Mia Lim (2022). Queering civil-military relations: the cultural work of recognition, recovery, and reproduction [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. https://doi.org/10.21953/lse.00004673
  • Igwe, Uche (20 January 2022) Intelligence failures are stunting Nigeria’s war on terror. Africa at LSE. picture_as_pdf
  • Jones, Matthew (2022). End of empire and the bomb: Britain, Malaya and nuclear weapons, 1956-57. The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 51(2), 351-383. https://doi.org/10.1080/03086534.2022.2116148 picture_as_pdf
  • Juling, Dominik (2022). The German military response to national disasters and emergencies: a case study of the flooding in the Summer of 2021. Journal of Advanced Military Studies, 13(1), 210 - 218. https://doi.org/10.21140/mcuj.20221301011
  • King, Will (2022). A weapon too far: the British radiological warfare experience, 1940-1955. War in History, 29(1), 205 - 227. https://doi.org/10.1177/0968344520922565 picture_as_pdf
  • Sattler, Sebastian, Jacobs, Edward, Singh, Ilina, Whetham, David, Bárd, Imre, Moreno, Jonathan, Galeazzi, Gian, Allansdottir, Agnes (2022). Neuroenhancements in the military: a mixed-method pilot study on attitudes of staff officers to ethics and rules. Neuroethics, 15(1). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12152-022-09490-2 picture_as_pdf
  • 2021
  • Chan, Kenddrick (2021). Book review: 2034: a novel of the next world war. (Digital IR: Book Review). LSE IDEAS, London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • Hinrichsen, Simon (2021). Essays on war reparations and sovereign debt: two hundred years of war debts and default, from the Napoleonic Wars to Iraq [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Letcher, Ken (2021). The revolt of the generals: President Eisenhower and the United States Army, 1953- 1958 [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. https://doi.org/10.21953/lse.00004387
  • Millar, Katharine M. (2021). What makes violence martial? Adopt a sniper and normative imaginaries of violence in the contemporary United States. Security Dialogue, 52(6), 493 - 511. https://doi.org/10.1177/0967010621997226 picture_as_pdf
  • Rozpedowski, Joanna (31 March 2021) Book review: Military waste: the unexpected consequences of permanent war readiness by Joshua O. Reno. LSE Review of Books. picture_as_pdf
  • Sayigh, Yezid (2021). Praetorian spearhead: the role of the military in the evolution of Egypt’s state capitalism 3.0. (LSE Middle East Centre paper series 43). LSE Middle East Centre. picture_as_pdf
  • Tambini, Damian (2021). Algorithmic pluralism: media regulation and system resilience in the age of information warfare. In Clack, Timothy, Johnson, Robert (Eds.), The World Information War: Western Resilience, Campaigning, and Cognitive Effects . Routledge. picture_as_pdf
  • Wenas Inkiriwang, Frega (2021). Multilateral naval exercise komodo enhancing Indonesia’s multilateral defence diplomacy? Journal of Current Southeast Asian Affairs, 40(3), 418 - 435. https://doi.org/10.1177/18681034211008905 picture_as_pdf
  • Wright, Hannah (2021). The making of militarism: gender, race and organisational cultures in UK national security policymaking [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • 2020
  • Aula, Ilari (2020). La diligencia debida como herramienta de prevención del conflicto en la República Democrática del Congo. Revista CIDOB d'Afers Internacionals, (125), 61-85. https://doi.org/10.24241/RCAI.2020.125.2.61 picture_as_pdf
  • Miethke, Lars (2020). Shared control: origins and consequences of integrated military capabilities: a dissertation on the integrated defence cooperation initiatives of the Netherlands and Germany and their impact on the core state powers of government [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. https://doi.org/10.21953/lse.00004209
  • Thornbury, Paul Charles (2020). Military culture and security: boundaries and identity in the UK private military security field [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. https://doi.org/10.21953/lse.00004221
  • 2019
  • Al-Khafaji, Hayder (2019). Iraq's popular mobilisation forces: the possibilities for Disarmament, Demobilisation & Reintegration. (LSE Middle East Centre Report November 2019). LSE Middle East Centre. picture_as_pdf
  • Eibl, Max Ferdinand, Hertog, Steffen, Slater, Dan (2019). War makes the regime: regional rebellions and political militarization worldwide. British Journal of Political Science, 0(0), 1-22. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007123419000528 picture_as_pdf
  • Higate, Paul, Dawes, Antonia, Edmunds, Tim, Jenkings, K. Neil, Woodward, Rachel (2019). Militarization, stigma, and resistance: negotiating military reservist identity in the civilian workplace. Critical Military Studies, https://doi.org/10.1080/23337486.2018.1554941 picture_as_pdf
  • Holvikivi, Aiko (2019). Fixing gender: the paradoxical politics of peacekeeper training [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Hutchinson, John (2019). La questione galiziana e il nazionalismo russo in guerra, 1902-1917: a review of the literature. Studies on National Movements, 22(1), 3-28. https://doi.org/10.1409/92634 picture_as_pdf
  • Vincent, Sam (2019). Innovation, technology and security: the emergence of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles before and after 9/11 [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • 2018
  • Barrons, Richard (2018). Victors and victims: creating a military for the digital age. (Strategic Update February 2018). LSE IDEAS, London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • Jones, Matthew (2018). Prelude to the Skybolt crisis: U.S. nuclear assistance to France, McNamara’s Ann Arbor speech, and American attitudes to the British strategic nuclear deterrent during 1962. Journal of Cold War Studies, 21(2), 58-109. https://doi.org/10.1162/jcws_a_00839
  • Smeltzer, Joshua (2018). Book review: colonial coptivity during the First World War: internment and the fall of the German empire, 1914-1919 by Mahon Murphy.
  • Stevenson, David (2018). The field artillery revolution and the European military balance, 1890-1914. International History Review, 41(6), 1301-1324. https://doi.org/10.1080/07075332.2018.1476396
  • Verweijen, Judith (2018). How do patronage networks affect military cohesion?
  • 2017
  • Anil, Pratinav (2017). Book review: army and nation: the military and Indian democracy since independence by Steven I. Wilkinson.
  • Brown, Chris (2017). Michael Walzer. In Brunstetter, Daniel R., O'Driscoll, Cian (Eds.), Just War Thinkers: From Cicero to the 21st Century (pp. 205-215). Routledge. https://doi.org/1138122483
  • Burke, Marshall, McGuirk, Eoin F. (2017). Food fights: food prices and civil conflict in Africa.
  • Chen, Kai (2017). Book Review: International Organizations and Military Affairs by Hylke Dijkstra.
  • Curtis, April (2017). Book review: understanding the imaginary war: culture, thought and nuclear conflict, 1945-90 edited by Matthew Grant and Benjamin Ziemann.
  • Devanny, Joe (2017). Book review: debriefing the president: the interrogation of Saddam Hussein by John Nixon.
  • Dill, Janina (2017). Abuse of law on the 21st century battlefield: a typology of lawfare. In Gross, Michael, Meisels, Tamar (Eds.), The Ethic of Soft War . Cambridge University Press.
  • Gani, Jasmine (2017). Why Trump’s Syria strike may have been a positive step.
  • Gashi, Krenar (2017). Kosovo’s early elections are reviving its ‘war’ and ‘peace’ camps.
  • Gohel, Sajjan (2017). Afghanistan: losses, setbacks and impending challenges (part 1).
  • Gohel, Sajjan (2017). Afghanistan: losses, setbacks and impending challenges (part 2).
  • Hartley, Dilys (2017). Statelessness and the Syrian conflict.
  • Jones, Ed (2017). Long read review: the impossible grammar of civil war by Ed Jones.
  • Jones, Matthew (2017). The official history of the UK strategic nuclear deterrent. Volume I: from the V-Bomber Era to the Arrival of Polaris, 1945-1964. Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315192543
  • Jones, Matthew (2017). The official history of the UK strategic nuclear deterrent. Volume II: the Labour government and the Polaris programme, 1964-1970. Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315192505
  • Kaya, Zeynep, Whiting, Matthew (2017). Sowing division: Kurds in the Syrian War. Middle East Policy, 24(1), 79-91. https://doi.org/10.1111/mepo.12253
  • Kearns, Oliver (2017). Public “traces” of drone strikes are reshaping what it means to witness warfare.
  • King, William (2017). A brief history of chemical warfare: from Sparta to Syria.
  • Lingelbach, Jochen (2017). Book review- Nation on Board: Becoming Nigerian at Sea by Lynn Schler.
  • McLean, Dylan (2017). Shooting for freedom: what guns teach us about US political culture.
  • Millar, Katharine (2017). Gendered representations of soldier deaths. In Duncanson, Claire, Woodward, Rachel (Eds.), Palgrave Handbook on Gender and the Military . Palgrave Macmillan. https://doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-51677-0 picture_as_pdf
  • Millar, Katharine M., Tidy, Joanna (2017). Combat as a moving target: masculinities, the heroic soldier myth and normative martial violence. Critical Military Studies, 3(2), 142-160. https://doi.org/10.1080/23337486.2017.1302556
  • Oliver, Tim, O'Mahony, Angela, Szayna, Thomas S., McNerney, Michael J., Eaton, Derek, Vernetti, Joel, Schwille, Michael, Pezard, Stephanie, Steinberg, Paul S. (2017). Assessing the value of regionally aligned forces in army security cooperation. (RAND Corporation research report.). RAND Corporation. https://doi.org/10.7249/RR1341.1
  • Po, Ronald C. (2017). 康雍年間的戰船修造與樟木採辦. In Mak, Ricardo (Ed.), 近代中國海防史新論 . Joint Publishing Co. Ltd..
  • Pugliese, Joseph (2017). How drones are gamifying war in America's casino capital.
  • Reddy, P. Avanash (2017). Battle of Mosul: mass displacement of natives and a blatant violation of international humanitarian laws.
  • Roquen, Jeff (2017). Book review: Park Chung Hee and modern Korea: the roots of militarism, 1866-1945 by Carter J. Eckert.
  • Rossdale, Chris (2017). Encounters at the gate. Critical Military Studies, https://doi.org/10.1080/23337486.2017.1314633
  • Saramifar, Younes (2017). Book review: Haredi masculinities between the Yeshiva, the army, work and politics: the sage, the warrior and the entrepreneur by Yohai Hakak.
  • Vaughan, Tom (2017). Book review: cultural politics of targeted killing: on drones, counter-insurgency and violence by Kyle Grayson.
  • Verma, Raj (2017). Book review: handbook of Indian defence policy: themes, structures and doctrines edited by Harsh Pant.
  • Veseli, Kadri, EUROPP, LSE (2017). Kadri Veseli: “Kosovo needs an army – we are worried about increasing Russian influence, the rise of extremism and Serbian provocations”.
  • Wu, Sharon (2017). Book review: man or monster?: the trial of a Khmer Rouge torturer by Alexander Laban Hinton.
  • Zeev, Nadav Ben (2017). News of defence spending changes the economic behaviour of people and firms.
  • 2016
  • Mahnken, Thomas, Maiolo, Joseph, Stevenson, David (Eds.) (2016). Arms races in international politics: from the nineteenth to the twenty-first century. Oxford University Press.
  • Alburez-Gutierrez, Diego (2016). Genocide is the tip of the iceberg: reviewing the Guatemalan case.
  • Beehner, Lionel, Meibauer, Gustav (2016). The futility of buffer zones in international politics. Orbis, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.orbis.2016.01.004
  • Borowski, Audrey (2016). Book review: The long read: a theory of the drone by Grégoire Chamayou.
  • Bushnell, Alexis (2016). Book review: Collateral damage: a cndid history of a peculiar form of death by Frederik Rosén.
  • Carayannis, Tatiana (2016). Making justice work: the Bemba case and the ICC’s future.
  • Chinkin, Christine, Henry, Marsha, Holvikivi, Aiko (2016). Women and Peacekeeping: Time for the UN to Commit to Gender Equality.
  • Dill, Janina (2016). Assessing proportionality: an unreasonable demand on the reasonable commander?
  • Dill, Janina (2016). The DoD law of war manual and the false appeal of differentiating types of civilians.
  • Dill, Janina (2016). Forcible alternatives to war. In Ohlin, Jens David (Ed.), Theoretical Boundaries of Armed Conflict and Human Rights (pp. 289-314). Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9781316481103.009
  • Dorman, Andrew M (2016). The UK Defence Review recognises the immediate risks yet provides solutions that are years away.
  • Edmunds, Timothy, Dawes, Antonia, Higate, Paul, Jenkings, K. Neil, Woodward, Rachel (2016). Reserve forces and the transformation of British military organisation: soldiers, citizens and society. Defence Studies, 16(2), 118-136. https://doi.org/10.1080/14702436.2016.1163225
  • Edwards, Brett, Cacciatori, Mattia (2016). Why Boris Johnson must support continued criminal investigations into the use of chemical weapons in Syria.
  • Edwards, Elizabeth (2016). #StandWithCongo.
  • Foulds, Wendy (2016). Book: making sense of the Central African Republic.
  • Funk, Alexandra (2016). Drones in contemporary warfare: the implications for human rights.
  • Gohel, Sajjan (2016). As the Baloch issue continues to be handled militarily rather than politically a peaceful resolution is unlikely.
  • Hilhorst, Dorothea (2016). Dorothea Hilhorst provides expert briefing to the UN on sexual violence response in the DRC.
  • Hoffmann, Kasper, Vlassenroot, Koen, Büscher, Karen (2016). JSRP paper: multi-layered security governance as a quick fix? The challenges of donor-supported bottom-up security provision in Ituri (DR Congo).
  • Hoyos-Carrero, Maria (2016). Dismantling labels: Colombia’s long-term challenge towards peace.
  • Ibreck, Rachel, Bulla, Godfrey, de Waal, Alex, Ndula, Victor (2016). Seeking justice in South Sudan.
  • Ibreck, Rachel, Pendle, Naomi, de Waal, Alex (2016). South Sudan: for every corrupt general, there are thousands who wish only for peace.
  • Kirk, Thomas (2016). The challenge of theorising security and justice provision in conflict-affected places.
  • Kirk, Thomas, Luckham, Robin, Carayannis, Tatiana (2016). The contested meaning of ‘security’ and ‘conflict resolution’: research from the JSRP.
  • Kroll, Stefan (2016). Humanitarian intervention: religion as a reason for intervention.
  • Macdonald, Anna, Porter, Holly E. (2016). The trial of Thomas Kwoyelo: opportunity or spectre – a new paper by Anna Macdonald and Holly Porter.
  • Mahaseth, Harsh (2016). Nepal in conflict: the war for justice continues.
  • Meltzer, Merrin (2016). Syria in crisis: the harrowing case of Aleppo.
  • Millar, Katharine M. (2016). Mutually implicated myths: the democratic control of the armed forces and militarism. In Bliesemann de Guevara, Berit (Ed.), Myth and Narrative in International Politics: Interpretive Approaches to the Study of IR (pp. 173-191). Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Misgar, Umar Lateef (2016). The UN needs to be salvaged.
  • Munshey, Menaal (2016). An incoherent push for peace in Afghanistan.
  • Nelson, Kim (2016). The doctrine of humanitarian intervention: lessons from the Chilcot Report.
  • O’Connor, Courteney J. (2016). Book review: predator empire: drone warfare and full spectrum dominance by Ian G. R. Shaw.
  • Papadaki, Katerina, Alpern, Steve, Lidbetter, Thomas, Morton, Alec (2016). Patrolling a border. Operations Research, 64(4), 1256-1269. https://doi.org/10.1287/opre.2016.1511
  • Pendle, Naomi (2016). A South Sudanese peace?
  • Perez-Leon-Acevedo, Juan Pablo (2016). Peruvian IDPs and the search for holistic transitional justice.
  • Radhakrishnan, Lakshana, Mahaseth, Harsh (2016). The Colombian conundrum: transitional injustice and beyond.
  • Sekyere, Kwame (2016). War and peace: from London to Aleppo.
  • Stevenson, David (2016). Conclusion. In Mahnken, Thomas, Maiolo, Joseph, Stevenson, David (Eds.), Arms Races in International Politics: From the Nineteenth to the Twenty-First Century (pp. 287 - 295). Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198735267.001.0001
  • Stevenson, David (2016). Introduction: before 1914. In Mahnken, Thomas, Maiolo, Joseph, Stevenson, David (Eds.), Arms Races in International Politics: From the Nineteenth to the Twenty-First Century (pp. 11-19). Oxford University Press.
  • Stevenson, David (2016). Land armaments in Europe, 1866-1914. In Mahnken, Thomas, Maiolo, Joseph, Stevenson, David (Eds.), Arms Races in International Politics: From the Nineteenth to the Twenty-First Century (pp. 41-58). Oxford University Press.
  • Weinstein, Adam (2016). What Pakistan’s war in the north reveals about post-conflict landscapes and the future of Syria.
  • White, Ben (2016). Silencing dissent: Palestine solidarity under attack.
  • Wolford, Miranda (2016). Beyond victimization: female perpetrators of genocide.
  • de Waal, Alex, Ndula, Victor (2016). South Sudan: the price of war, the price of peace.
  • 2015
  • Adaire, Esther (2015). Book review: the philosophy of war and exile by Nolen Gertz.
  • Alaaldin, Ranj (2015). Air strikes in Syria are a good start, but the lessons of Iraq and Libya must be learned.
  • Alaaldin, Ranj (2015). The West must hit ISIS harder.
  • Bayly, Martin J. (2015). Imperial ontological (in)security: ‘buffer states’, international relations and the case of Anglo-Afghan relations, 1808–1878. European Journal of International Relations, 21(4), 816 - 840. https://doi.org/10.1177/1354066114557569
  • Betts, Wendy (11 November 2015) UN Forum series – monitoring compliance with the UN guiding principles in conflict zones. Measuring Business and Human Rights. picture_as_pdf
  • Blick, Andrew (2015). Four options for configuring the British constitution.
  • Brenner, David, Li, Hkun, Lat, Hkun (2015). A view from the border: everyday lives in Burma’s conflict zones in times of transition.
  • Cetorelli, Valeria, Khawaja, Marwan (2015-03-20 - 2015-03-21) Fertility responses to violent conflict: evidence from the Second Palestinian Intifada [Paper]. Lancet Palestinian Health Alliance 6th conference, Beirut, Lebanon, LBN.
  • Clements, Ben (2015). Britain and the bomb: Surveying party supporters’ attitudes on the nuclear weapons debate.
  • Di Bernardo, Francesco (2015). Book review: land and freedom: the MST, the Zapatistas and peasant alternatives to neoliberalism by Leandro Vergara-Camus.
  • Dill, Janina (2015). The 21st-century belligerent’s trilemma. European Journal of International Law, 26(1), 83-108. https://doi.org/10.1093/ejil/chv005
  • Dill, Janina (2015). The Janus faced nature of international war and law.
  • Dill, Janina (2015). "Proportionate" collateral damage and why we should care about what civilians think.
  • Dill, Janina (2015). The informal regulation of drones and the formal legal regulation of war. Ethics and International Affairs, 29(1), 51-58. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0892679414000756
  • Dill, Janina (2015). Ending wars: the jus ad bellum principles suspended, repeated, or adjusted? Ethics, 125(3), 627-630. https://doi.org/10.1086/679529
  • Foulds, Wendy (2015). Corruption, protest and militancy.
  • Foulds, Wendy (2015). Myths set in motion: the moral economy of Mai-Mai governance.
  • Foulds, Wendy (2015). South Sudan: who got what?
  • Gibson, Bryan R. (2015). For all parties involved, the Iran nuclear deal is a big win.
  • Hall, Gavin E (2015). Book review: deciphering Sun Tzu: how to read the art of war by Derek M Yuen.
  • Hye, Daniel (2015). Protected category or target: the civilian in global conflict and warfare.
  • Iff, Andrea (2015). UN FORUM SERIES – measuring progress on human rights, and peace, in conflict affected areas.
  • Iqtidar, Humeira (2015). The killing of British citizens without democratic oversight raises questions over the government’s use of drones.
  • Jakštaitė, Gerda, Česnakas, Giedrius (2015). Lithuania’s reintroduction of conscription is a clear response to the threat posed by Russia in the Baltics.
  • Kaufmann, Eric (2015). Partition: It’s time to recognise reality in Syria.
  • Kiss, Yudit (2015). New trends in weapons production in East Central Europe reflect major changes in the global arms industry.
  • Legrain, Philippe (2015). Five minutes with Philippe Legrain: “The Eurozone has become a glorified debtors’ prison”.
  • Macdonald, Anna (2015). Justice in the world’s most difficult places.
  • Martin, Kenneth (2015). Book review: adapting to win: how insurgents fight and defeat foreign states in war by Noriyuki Katagiri.
  • Moten, Matthew (2015). Book review: presidents and their generals: an American history of command in war by Matthew Moten.
  • Muravska, Julia (2015). Book review: killing hope: US military and CIA interventions since World War II, Updated Edition, by William Blum.
  • Oliver, Tim (11 November 2015) UK national security and the Brexit debate – now more than ever they are closely locked. LSE Brexit. picture_as_pdf
  • Pangburn, Aaron (2015). Mobutu’s lingering legacy in Gbadolite.
  • Plümper, Thomas, Neumayer, Eric (2015). Free-riding in alliances: testing an old theory with a new method. Conflict Management and Peace Science, 32(3), 247-268. https://doi.org/10.1177/0738894214522916
  • Sosnowski, Marika (2015). Book review: Rule of law in war: internationallaw and United States counterinsurgency inIraq and Afghanistan by Travers McLeod.
  • Swan, Sean (2015). If bombing the Middle East was the way to peace, it would be the most peaceful place on Earth.
  • Terry, Jillian (2015). Towards a feminist ethics of war: rethinking moral justifications for contemporary warfare [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Warren, Michael (2015). Book review: Britain’s nuclear experience: the roles of beliefs, culture and identity.
  • Williams, Katherine (2015). Book review: critical approaches to international security, 2nd Edition.
  • Zontos, Michail (2015). Book review: the theater of operations: national security affect from the Cold War to the War on Terror.
  • de Waal, Alex (2015). An agenda for research into justice in South Sudan.
  • 2014
  • Ali, Taskeen (2014). Black money. LSE Research Festival 2014. London, London, United Kingdom, GBR.
  • Ali, Taskeen (2014). Burning assets. LSE Research Festival 2014. London, London, United Kingdom, GBR.
  • Ali, Taskeen (2014). Charred by charcoal. LSE Research Festival 2014. London, London, United Kingdom, GBR.
  • Barrett, David M. (2014). The Senate’s CIA torture report marks a return to democratic accountability that went astray during the Bush era.
  • Brett, Edwin (2014). Responding to Intractable Insurgencies: Civil Society, Contested Environments and International (In)Security.
  • Bushnell, Alexis (2014). Book review: the violence of the image: photography and international conflict, edited by Liam Kennedy and Caitlin Patrick.
  • Casey, Steven (2014). Media. In Showalter, Dennis (Ed.), Oxford Bibliographies in Military History . Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/obo/9780199791279-0124
  • Casey, Steven (2014). War correspondents. In Showalter, Dennis (Ed.), Oxford Bibliographies in Military History . Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/obo/9780199791279-0088
  • Casey, Steven (2014). When soldiers fall: how Americans have confronted combat losses from World War I to Afghanistan. Oxford University Press.
  • Coates Ulrichsen, Kristian (2014). U.S. strikes in Syria may mean that the next President is doomed to inherit a long term conflict in the Middle East.
  • Defty, Andrew (2014). Recent events at the Intelligence and Security Committee make it increasingly difficult to justify the current arrangements for scrutinising the security services.
  • Delgado, Magdalena C. (2014). Book review: will the Middle East implode? by Mohammed Ayoob.
  • Dill, Janina (2014). The American way of bombing and international law: two logics of warfare in tension. In Evangelista, Matthew, Shue, Henry (Eds.), The American Way of Bombing: Changing Ethical and Legal Norms, from Flying Fortresses to Drones (pp. 131-144). Cornell University Press.
  • Dorman, Andrew (2014). The capabilities of Britain’s armed forces may not be diminishing as starkly as the numbers might suggest.
  • Ette, Mercy (2014). Book review: gender, war, and conflict by Laura Sjoberg.
  • Ette, Mercy (2014). Book review: waging gendered wars: U.S. military women in Afghanistan and Iraq by Paige Whaley Eager.
  • Gani, Jasmine (2014). It remains to be seen if ISIS will provide Washington with an opportunity to recover its strategy and reputation over Syria.
  • Hastedt, Glenn (2014). The Senate’s CIA report may help to lead to a new politics of intelligence in Washington.
  • Jones, Heather, Audoin-Rouzeau, Stéphane (2014). Introduction: forces armées. In Winter, Jay (Ed.), La Première Guerre Mondiale (pp. 171-174). Librairie Arthème Fayard.
  • Kibbe, Jennifer (2014). The Senate’s torture report shows how hamstrung Congressional oversight of the intelligence community really is.
  • Leveringhaus, Alexander (2014). Book review: the ethics of armed conflict: a cosmopolitan just war theory by John W. Lango.
  • Liu, Shuo (2014). Book review: legions of peace: UN peacekeepers from the global south by Philip Cunliffe.
  • Mena, Olivia (2014). Book review: drone warfare by John Kaag and Sarah Kreps.
  • Moran, Matthew (2014). Big data brings new power to open-source intelligence.
  • Nevo, Yael (2014). Peace with guns? Women’s human rights and the masculinisation of peace and security.
  • Njung, George (2014). #GreatWarInAfrica: Honour motivated some Cameroonian soldiers who fought for Germany during the First World War.
  • Njung, George (2014). La Grande Guerre en Afrique : La notion d’honneur, s’est révélée être un facteur de motivation pour certains soldats camerounais, ayant combattu pour l’Allemagne lors de la Première Guerre mondiale.
  • Serdyuk, Elena (2014). Eastern Ukraine – a personal view of a land of myth, fear and dangers (guest blog).
  • Serdyuk, Elena (2014). A Ukrainian take on Russia’s ‘propaganda’ campaign (guest blog).
  • Singeisen, David (2014). Book review: conscientious objectors in Israel: citizenship, sacrifice, trials of fealty by Erica Weiss.
  • Sprik, Lenneke (2014). Book review: analyzing the drone debates: targeted killing, remote warfare, and military technology by James DeShaw Rae.
  • Strong, James (2014). Britain should prepare for military action in Iraq.
  • Varin, Caroline (2014). Book review: the fog of peace: the human face of conflict resolution by Gabrielle Rifkind and Giandomenico Picco.
  • Verweijen, Judith (2014). Understanding violence by African government forces: the need for a micro-dynamics approach.
  • Werdine Norris, Maria (2014). Beware the beating drums of war.
  • Zheng, Carmen (2014). War reporting from afar: covering the covert drone war.
  • de Waal, Alex (2014). The UN’s Darfur “cover-up” and the need for reliable conflict data.
  • van Veen, Erwin (2014). The security that people get is often not what they want.
  • 2013
  • Aagaard Nøhr, Andreas (2013). Book review: the Iraq War: a philosophical analysis.
  • Adam, Jeroen (2013). Fighting for peace? The strange contradictions in the current Zamboanga standoff.
  • Allen, Graham (2013). The Government needs to legislate to confirm Parliament’s role in conflict decisions.
  • Brown, Chris (2013). Just war and political judgment. In Lang, Anthony F., O’Driscoll, Cian, Williams, John (Eds.), Just War: Authority, Tradition, and Practice (pp. 25-48). Georgetown University Press.
  • Chen, Kai (2013). Book review: International security: the contemporary agenda.
  • Chinkin, Christine, Kaldor, Mary (2013). Gender and new wars. Journal of International Affairs, 67(1), 167-187.
  • Chouliaraki, Lilie (2013). Liberal ethics and the spectacle of war. In Couldry, Nick, Madianou, Mirca, Pinchevski, Amit (Eds.), Ethics of Media (pp. 136-160). Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Clift, Hamish (2013). Book review: International law and civil wars.
  • Coker, Christopher (2013). Warrior geeks: how 21st century technology is changing the way we fight and think about war. Hurst Publishers (London, England).
  • Dill, Janina (2013). Should international law ensure the moral acceptability of war? Leiden Journal of International Law, 26(2), 253-270. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0922156513000034
  • Diskaya, Ali (2013). Book review: Nuclear weapons in the information age.
  • El Issawi, Fatima (16 August 2013) Egypt's media war. Polis Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Evans, Ryan (2013). Book review: Demobilizing irregular forces.
  • Ferrari, Lorenzo (2013). Book review: Ordnance: war + architecture & space.
  • Fiott, Daniel (2013). A European-level review process is needed for all non-EU defence foreign investment.
  • Foulds, Wendy (2013). Advocacy in conflict: “half-truths” on behalf of the powerful?
  • Foulds, Wendy (2013). Rethinking the climate-conflict connection.
  • Foulds, Wendy (2013). Security: for whom, by whom?
  • Foulds, Wendy (2013). UPDATED: Africa in the 2011 Libyan conflict: the inside story.
  • Gray, Harriet (2013). Women in ‘combat’: a revolution in the US military?
  • Haddon, Catherine, Ziegler, Katja, Peters, Dirk, Blick, Andrew, Hallwood, James (2013). War, peace and Parliament: experts respond to the government’s defeat on Syrian intervention.
  • Hannoush, Raneem (2013). Egyptian for a week.
  • Hartnett, Liane (2013). Book review: America’s war on terror: the state of the 9/11 exception from Bush to Obama.
  • Himmrich, Julia (2013). Book review: Changing norms though actions: the evolution of sovereignty.
  • Holmqvist, Caroline (2013). Undoing war: war ontologies and the materiality of drone warfare. Millennium: Journal of International Studies, 41(3), 535-552. https://doi.org/10.1177/0305829813483350
  • Hughes, James (2013). State violence in the origins of nationalism: British counterinsurgency and the rebirth of Irish nationalism, 1969-1972. In Hall, John A., Malesevic, Sinisa (Eds.), Nationalism and War (pp. 97-123). Cambridge University Press.
  • Keranen, Outi (2013). Book review: Can peace research make peace? Lessons inacademic diplomacy.
  • Kippin, Sean (2013). Democratic round-up: Parliament and Syria.
  • Kissane, Bill (2013). Victory in defeat?: national identity after civil war in Finland and Ireland. In Hall, John A., Malešević, Siniša (Eds.), Nationalism and War (pp. 321-340). Cambridge University Press.
  • Lee, Peter (2013). Book Review: British generals in Blair’s wars.
  • Marhia, Natasha (2013). Some humans are more human than others: troubling the 'human' in human security from a critical feminist perspective. Security Dialogue, 44(1), 19-35. https://doi.org/10.1177/0967010612470293
  • McCracken, Andrew (2013). Book review: The art of war in an asymmetric world: strategy for the post-Cold War era.
  • McDoom, Omar Shahabudin (2013). Who killed in Rwanda’s genocide? Micro-space, social influence and individual participation in intergroup violence. Journal of Peace Research, 50(4), 453-467. https://doi.org/10.1177/0022343313478958
  • Mueller, Ben (2013). Book review: War, Clausewitz and the trinity.
  • Muravska, Julia (2013). Book review: Cyber war will not take place.
  • Rahbek-Clemmensen, Jon (2013). Beyond ‘the soldier and the state’ - the theoretical framework of elite civil-military relations [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • Roquen, Jeff (2013). Book review: Proxy warfare.
  • Russell, Meg (2013). David Cameron’s Syria defeat was unexpected, but Prime Ministers are regularly forced to bow to Parliament’s will.
  • Russell, Meg (2013). David Cameron’s Syria defeat was unexpected, but Prime Ministers are regularly forced to bow to Parliament’s will.
  • Schomerus, Mareike (2013). A stone, justice and security.
  • Shahi, Jasmit (2013). Reporting Sri Lanka – the truth that wasn’t there.
  • Sylvester, Christine (2013). Book review: Women and wars.
  • Titeca, Kristof (2013). Governance and post-conflict reconstruction in Northern Uganda.
  • Wald, Erica (2013). Understanding empire through the space of the cantonment in 19th century India.
  • Wilks-Heeg, Stuart, Blick, Andrew, Crone, Stephen (2013). Parliament has relatively weak war powers compared to legislatures in other democracies.
  • 2012
  • Balfour, Sebastian (2012). El Ejército Colonial y la Guerra Civil. In Morente, Francisco (Ed.), España En la Crisis Europea De Entreguerras (pp. 326-333). Libros de la Catarata.
  • Balfour, Sebastian (2012). Guerras químicas coloniales entre 1919-1939 y el caso español. In Gómez Ochoa, Fidel, Macías Fernández, Daniel (Eds.), El Combatiente a Lo largo De la Historia: IMAginario, Percepción, Representación (pp. 125-134). Ediciones Universidad de Cantabria.
  • Bhatt, Chetan (2012). Human rights and the transformations of war. Sociology, 46(5), 813-824. https://doi.org/10.1177/0038038512450102
  • Blanchard, Shanthi Marie (2012). Coming of age and love in post 9/11 America part 1.
  • Bolton, Matthew, Sakamoto, Eiko Elize, Griffiths, Hugh (2012). Globalization and the Kalashnikov: public-private networks in the trafficking and control of small arms. Global Policy, 3(3), 303-313. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1758-5899.2011.00118.x
  • Cetorelli, Valeria, Khawaja, Marwan (2012-09-10 - 2012-09-12) Fertility responses to violent conflict: evidence from the Second Palestinian Intifada [Paper]. British Society for Population Studies Annual Conference, Nottingham, United Kingdom, GBR.
  • Collins, John (2012). Unleashing the dogs of war – A growing strategic inevitability?
  • Delap, Lucy (2012). Book review: military masculinity in the media: moving on from Rambo.
  • Dill, Janina, Shue, Henry (2012). Limiting the killing in war: military necessity and the St. Petersburg assumption. Ethics and International Affairs, 26(3), 311-333. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0892679412000445
  • Henry, Marsha (2012). Peacexploitation?: interrogating labor hierarchies and global sisterhood among Indian and Uruguayan female peacekeepers. Globalizations, 9(1), 15-33. https://doi.org/10.1080/14747731.2012.627716
  • Hughes, Christopher R. (2012). The role of the military in China’s leadership transition. European Union Institute for Security Studies Articles, online,
  • Johnson, Gaynor (2012). Book review: embassies in armed conflict.
  • Kaldor, Mary (2012). New and old wars: organized violence in a global era. Polity Press.
  • Keen, David (2012). Peace as an incentive for war. In Curtis, Devon, Dzinesa, Gwinyayi A. (Eds.), Peacebuilding, Power, and Politics in Africa (pp. 31-46). Ohio University Press ; Swallow Press.
  • Kuecken, Maria (2012). Book review: illuminating the dark arts of war: terrorism, sabotage, and subversion in homeland security and the new conflict.
  • Le Riche, Matthew (2012). LSE academic describes Sudanese attack on South Sudan town.
  • Lieven, Dominic (2012). Tolstoy on war, Russia, and empire. In McPeak, Rick, Orwin, Donna Tussing (Eds.), Tolstoy on War: Narrative Art and Historical Truth in "War and Peace" . Cornell University Press.
  • Olivas Osuna, José Javier (2012). Civilian control of the military in Portugal and Spain: a policy instruments approach [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. https://doi.org/10.21953/lse.t38t7p0phmq0 picture_as_pdf
  • Partridge, Matthew (2012). Book review: the transformation of Europe’s armed forces: from the Rhine to Afghanistan.
  • Rahbek-Clemmensen, Jon, Archer, Emerald, Barr, John, Belkin, Aaron, Guerrero, Mario, Hall, Cameron, Swain, Katie E. O. (2012). Conceptualizing the civil-military gap: a research note. Armed Forces and Society, 38(4), 669-678. https://doi.org/10.1177/0095327X12456509
  • Rangelov, Iavor, Kaldor, Mary (2012). Persistent conflict. Conflict, Security and Development, 12(3), 193-199. https://doi.org/10.1080/14678802.2012.703531
  • Rangelov, Iavor, Theros, Marika (2012). Abuse of power and conflict persistence in Afghanistan. Conflict, Security and Development, 12(3), 227-248. https://doi.org/10.1080/14678802.2012.703533
  • Sorri, Karl (2012). The war correspondent action hero (guest blog).
  • Stevenson, David (2012). Fortifications and the European military balance before 1914. Journal of Strategic Studies, 35(6), 829-859. https://doi.org/10.1080/01402390.2012.694816
  • de Goede, Meike (2012). Book review: useful enemies: when waging wars is more important than winning them.
  • 2011
  • Allen, Graham (2011). The Government must be held to its promise to “enshrine in law for the future the necessity of consulting Parliament on military action”.
  • Alpern, Steven, Morton, Alec, Papadaki, Katerina (2011). Patrolling games. Operations Research, 59(5), 1246-1257. https://doi.org/10.1287/opre.1110.0983
  • Brown, Chris (2011). The Strategic Defence Review is an incoherent mess of stalled (but unresolved) decision making: it creates future problems that will not go away.
  • Dill, Janina (2011). Puntland's declaration of autonomy and Somaliland's secession: two quests for self-governance in a failed state. In Weller, Marc, Nobbs, Katherine (Eds.), Asymmetric Autonomy and the Settlement of Ethnic Conflicts (pp. 278-297). University of Pennsylvania. Press.
  • Dodge, Toby (2011). From regime chance to civil war: explaining violence in post-invasion Iraq. In Berdal, Mats, Suhrke, Astri (Eds.), The Peace in Between: Post-War Violence and Peacebuilding (pp. 132-150). Routledge.
  • Gordon, Stuart (2011). Health, stabilization and securitization: towards understanding the drivers of the military role in health interventions. Medicine, Conflict and Survival, 27(1), 43-66. https://doi.org/10.1080/13623699.2011.562397
  • Gurung, Reena (2011). War reporting: it’s just journalism (summer school guest blog).
  • Jones, Heather (2011). Blockades. In Martel, Gordon (Ed.), The Encyclopedia of War . Wiley-Blackwell. https://doi.org/10.1002/9781444338232.wbeow071
  • Jones, Heather (2011). Violence against prisoners of war in the First World War: Britain, France and Germany, 1914–1920. Cambridge University Press.
  • Kaldor, Mary (2011). Stability, war and human security in the 21st century: addendum to Desai. Global Policy, 2(2), 229-230. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1758-5899.2010.00075.x
  • Knox, MacGregor (2011). Thinking war - history lite? Journal of Strategic Studies, 34(4), 489-500. https://doi.org/10.1080/01402390.2011.594676
  • Lebow, Richard N. (2011). Book review: barbarous philosophers: reflections on the nature of war from Heraclitus to Heisenberg - by Christopher Coker. International Affairs, 87(1), 195-196. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-2346.2011.00968.x
  • Longinotti, Edward (2011). An alternative strategic defence and security review: reconstituting a shrinking force. Economic Affairs, 31(3), 56-59. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-0270.2011.02102.x
  • McDoom, Omar Shahabudin (2011). Rwanda's exit pathway from violence: a strategic assessment. (World development report: background case study 62054). World Bank.
  • McDoom, Omar Shahabudin (2011). The psychology of security threats in ethnic warfare: evidence from Rwanda's genocide. (PSPE working papers 5, 2011). London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • O'Brien, Patrick (2011). The contributions of warfare with Revolutionary and Napoleonic France to the consolidation and progress of the British industrial revolution. (Economic History Working Papers 150/11). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Otsuka, Michael (2011). Book review: Licensed to kill. Analysis, 71(3), p. 523. https://doi.org/10.1093/analys/anr060
  • Partridge, Matthew (2011). Book review: the development of British defence policy: Blair, Brown and beyond.
  • Partridge, Matthew (2011). Cameron and Hague are wrong – drones and ‘cyber-warfare’ will not replace conventional forces.
  • Ralph, Jason (2011). The Awlaki killing and Nashiri’s prosecution should give the British government cause for concern on the direction of Obama’s war on terror.
  • Scalvini, Marco (2011). Obama: the rhetoric of justice (guest blog).
  • Sowers, Thomas S. (2011). Nanomanagement superior control and subordinate autonomy in conflict: mid-level officers of the U.S. and British armies in Iraq (2003-2008) [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • Wald, Erica (2011). Health, discipline and appropriate behaviour: the body of the soldier and space of the cantonmet. Modern Asian Studies, 46(4), 815-856. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0026749X11000746
  • Weisz-Rind, Yael (2011-05-26) Dissident soldiers in militaristic society: the case of Israel (2000-2005) [Poster]. LSE Research Day 2011: The Early Career Researcher, London, United Kingdom, GBR.
  • 2010
  • Allen, Tim, Vlassenroot, Koen (Eds.) (2010). The Lord's Resistance Army: myth and reality. Zed Books.
  • Ainley, Kirsten (2010). Book review: ‘War Games: The Story of Aid and War in Modern Times’ by Linda Polman. International Affairs, 86(5), 1218-1221. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-2346.2010.00937.x
  • Allen, Tim (2010). Bitter Roots: the 'intervention' of Acholi traditional justice. In Allen, Tim, Vlassenroot, Koen (Eds.), The Lord's Resistance Army: Myth and Reality . Zed Books.
  • Allen, Tim, Laker, F., Schomerus, Mareike, Porter, Holly E. (2010). Postscript: the Lord's Resistance Army. In Allen, Tim, Vlassenroot, Koen (Eds.), The Lord's Resistance Army: Myth and Reality . Zed Books.
  • Allen, Tim, Vlassenroot, Koen (2010). Introduction: the Lord's Resistance Army: myth and reality. In Allen, Tim, Vlassenroot, Koen (Eds.), The Lord's Resistance Army: Myth and Reality . Zed Books.
  • Balfour, Sebastian (2010). The making of an interventionist army, 1898-1923. In Romero Salvadó, Francisco J., Smith, Angel (Eds.), The Agony of Spanish Liberalism: From Revolution to Dictatorship 1913-23 (pp. 255-274). Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Besley, Timothy, Robinson, James A. (2010). Quis custodiet ipsos custodes: civilian control over the military. Journal of the European Economic Association, 8(2-3), 655-663. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1542-4774.2010.tb00535.x
  • Bolton, Matthew B. (2010). Foreign aid and landmine clearance: governance, politics and security in Afghanistan, Bosnia and Sudan. I.B. Tauris Publishers.
  • Bouçek, Francoise (2010). Can Anglo-French military cooperation fill the gaps of the Strategic Defence Review?
  • Brahimi, Alia (2010). Jihad and just war in the War on Terror. Oxford University Press.
  • Brown, Chris (2010). Can only front line service cuts save Defence expenditure?
  • Burton, Guy (2010). A puzzling scenario? UNITAS exercises in Peru.
  • Chassang, Sylvain, Padró i Miquel, Gerard (2010). Conflict and deterrence under strategic risk. Quarterly Journal of Economics, 125(4), 1821-1858. https://doi.org/10.1162/qjec.2010.125.4.1821
  • Coker, Christopher (2010). Barbarous philosophers: reflections on the nature of war from Heraclitus to Heisenberg. Hurst Publishers (London, England).
  • Condra, Luke N., Felter, Joseph H., Iyengar, Radha, Shapiro, Jacob N. (2010). The effect of civilian casualties in Afghanistan and Iraq. (NBER working papers 16152). National Bureau of Economic Research.
  • Cooley, Alexander, Hopkin, Jonathan (2010). Base closings: the rise and decline of the US military bases issue in Spain, 1975-2005. International Political Science Review, 31(4), 494-513. https://doi.org/10.1177/0192512110372975
  • Dill, Janina (2010). Applying the principle of proportionality in combat operations. (Policy Briefs and Working Papers). Oxford Institute for Ethics, Law, and Armed Conflict.
  • International Affairs Blog (2010). NATO goes into Marjah.
  • Iyengar, Radha (2010). Open debate will prompt reaction from insurgents.
  • Kalinovsky, Artemy (2010). Afghanistan: more echoes of the Soviet experience.
  • Kjaernested, Bjork (2010). War stories – how to bring the battle to the book.
  • Kwon, Heonik (2010). Korean war traumas. Asia Pacific Journal: Japan Focus,
  • Kwon, Heonik (2010). The other cold war. Columbia University Press.
  • Kwon, Heonik (2010). The power of family feelings.
  • Ludlow, N. Piers (2010). Transatlantic relations in the Johnson and Nixon eras: the crisis that didn't happen - and what it suggests about the one that did. Journal of Transatlantic Studies, 8(1), 44-55. https://doi.org/10.1080/14794010903533933
  • Prins, Gwyn, Blackham, Jeremy (2010). Britain’s trade depends on the sea. In the coming public expenditure cuts we cannot afford to ‘sign off’ from maritime security and naval defence.
  • Rezk, Dina (2010). The revolution in military affairs and the changing nature of warfare in the Middle East.
  • Roach, Morgan (2010). Why Fox stands ‘shoulder to shoulder’ with the USA in Afghanistan.
  • Sandstrom, Karl (2010). Afghanistan: Can the troop surge be effective?
  • Sanin, Francisco Gutierrez, Giustozzi, Antonio (2010). Networks and armies: structuring rebellion in Colombia and Afghanistan. Studies in Conflict and Terrorism, 33(9), 836-853. https://doi.org/10.1080/1057610X.2010.501425
  • Schomerus, Mareike, Allen, Tim (2010). Southern Sudan at odds with itself: dynamics of conflict and predicaments of peace. London School of Economics and Political Science. Development Studies Institute.
  • Voller, Yaniv (2010). A decade for the Israeli withdrawal from Lebanon: How much has changed?
  • 2009
  • École spéciale militaire de Saint-Cyr (2009-05-12 - 2009-05-14) Managing populations in irregular war: moral assymetry [Other]. Saint-Cyr International Conference on Irregular Warfare, Coëtquidan, France, FRA.
  • Oxford Leverhulme programme on the changing nature of war The Leverhulme Trust (2009-03-04) Why Osama bin Laden wants to kill you: Al-Qaeda’s moral justitications for war [Other]. Public lecture, Rhode Island, United States, USA.
  • Alpern, Steven, Morton, Alec, Papadaki, Katerina (2009). Optimizing randomized patrols. (Operational Research working papers LSEOR 09.116). Operational Research Group, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2009). Eyeless in Gaza? Reporting the Israel-Hamas conflict.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2009). War reporting: time to work with the civilians.
  • Chassang, Sylvain, Padró i Miquel, Gerard (2009). Economic shocks and civil war. Quarterly Journal of Political Science, 4(3), 211-228. https://doi.org/10.1561/100.00008072
  • Chouliaraki, Lilie (2009). Journalism and the visual politics of war and conflict. In Allan, Stuart (Ed.), Routledge Companion to News and Journalism (pp. 520-533). Routledge.
  • Dennis, Danfung (2009). Photojournalism at war: how do you do it (and pay for it) in the new media market?
  • Giustozzi, Antonio (2009). The Afghan national army: unwarranted hope? RUSI Journal, 154(6), 36-42. https://doi.org/10.1080/03071840903532882
  • Gutiérrez Sanín, Francisco, González Peña, Andrea (2009). Force and ambiguity: evaluating sources for cross-national research – the case of military interventions. (Crisis States Research Centre working papers series 2 50). Crisis States Research Centre, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Haacke, Jürgen, Williams, Paul D. (2009). Regional arrangements and security challenges: a comparative analysis. (Crisis States Research Centre working papers series 2 52). Crisis States Research Centre, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Howell, Jude, Lind, Jeremy (2009). Civil society in crisis: state-building and civil-military relations in Afghanistan. Non-Governmental Public Action, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Kaplan, Molly (2009). Unseen Gaza: the debate continues.
  • Knox, MacGregor (2009). Hitler's Italian allies: royal armed forces, fascist regime, and the war of 1940–1943. Cambridge University Press.
  • Neumayer, Eric (2009). A new moral hazard? Military intervention, peacekeeping and the International Criminal Court. Journal of Peace Research, 46(5), 659-670. https://doi.org/10.1177/0022343309339246
  • Packard, Edward Frederick (2009). Whitehall, industrial mobilisation and the private manufacture of armaments: British state-industry relations, 1918-1936 [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • Rodgers, Dennis, Muggah, Robert (2009). Gangs as non-state armed groups: the Central American case. Contemporary Security Policy, 30(2), 301-317. https://doi.org/10.1080/13523260903059948
  • Wulf, Herbert, Debiel, Tobias (2009). Conflict early warning and response mechanisms: tools for enhancing the effectiveness of regional organisations? A comparative study of the AU, ECOWAS, IGAD, ASEAN/ARF and PIF. (Crisis States Research Centre working papers series 2 49). Crisis States Research Centre, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • 2008
  • Balfour, Sebastian (2008). Colonial war and civil war: the Spanish Army of Africa. In Baumeister, Martin, Schüler-Springorum, Stefanie (Eds.), "if You Tolerate This . . . ": the Spanish Civil War in the Age of Total War . Campus Verlag.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Classical war reporting.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Iraq 5 years on: media myths and mundanity.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). NATO plans invasion of the Internet.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Why aren't we angry about Harry cover-up?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). The drama of news: war, lies and videotape.
  • Chassang, Sylvain, Padró i Miquel, Gerard (2008). Conflict and deterrence under strategic risk. (NBER working papers 13964). NBER.
  • Gerges, Fawaz A. (2008). Petraeus progress report falls flat. Dissent,
  • Gerges, Fawaz A. (2008). War fatigue: how the Iraq war is straining our U.S. soldiers. Dissent,
  • Hutchings, Kimberly (2008). Making sense of masculinity and war. Men and Masculinities, 10(4), 389-404. https://doi.org/10.1177/1097184X07306740
  • Iyengar, Radha, Monten, Jonathan (2008). Is there an 'emboldenment' effect?: evidence from the insurgency in Iraq. (NBER working papers 13839). National Bureau of Economic Research.
  • Jones, Heather (2008). A missing paradigm?: military captivity and the prisoner of war, 1914-18. Immigrants and Minorities, 26(1), 19-48. https://doi.org/10.1080/02619280802442589
  • Kalinovsky, Artemy (2008). Obama and Afghanistan: Lessons from the Last War.
  • Kalinovsky, Artemy (2008). A long goodbye.
  • Kaplan, Molly (2008). Reporting war – why do they do it?
  • Kaplan, Molly (2008). War reporting: the view from the frontline.
  • Keen, David (2008). حرب بلا نهاية. Obeikan Publishing.
  • Kitchen, Nicholas (2008). The power of pictures.
  • Kwon, Heonik (2008). Co so cach mang and the social network of war. In Bradley, Mark Philip, Young, Marilyn B. (Eds.), Making Sense of the Vietnam Wars: Local, National, and Transnational Perspectives . Oxford University Press.
  • Kwon, Heonik (2008). Excavating the history of collaboration. Asia Pacific Journal: Japan Focus,
  • Kwon, Heonik (2008). Ghosts of war in Vietnam. Cambridge University Press.
  • Kwon, Heonik (2008). The Korean war mass graves. Asia Pacific Journal: Japan Focus,
  • Kwon, Heonik (2008). The ghosts of the American war in Vietnam. Asia Pacific Journal: Japan Focus,
  • Kwon, Heonik (24 January 2008) The ghosts of the American war in Vietnam. History News Network.
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  • 2002
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  • 2001
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  • 1999
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  • 1998
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  • 1993
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