Civil-Military Relations in Turkey
In: The Evolution of Civil-Military Relations in South East Europe, p. 229-257
66365 results
Sort by:
In: The Evolution of Civil-Military Relations in South East Europe, p. 229-257
In: Cambridge elements
In: Elements in politics and society in Southeast Asia
Civil-Military Relations in Southeast Asia reviews the historical origins, contemporary patterns, and emerging changes in civil-military relations in Southeast Asia from colonial times until today. It analyzes what types of military organizations emerged in the late colonial period and the impact of colonial legacies and the Japanese occupation in World War II on the formation of national armies and their role in processes of achieving independence. It analyzes the long term trajectories and recent changes of professional, revolutionary, praetorian and neo-patrimonial civil-military relations in the region. Finally, it analyzes military roles in state- and nation-building; political domination; revolutions and regime transitions; and military entrepreneurship
In: Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Politics
"Canada: Very "Civil" Military Relations" published on by Oxford University Press.
In: Armed forces & society, Volume 36, Issue 4, p. 758-760
ISSN: 1556-0848
In: Democracy and security, Volume 5, Issue 3, p. 309-315
ISSN: 1741-9166
In: Journal of democracy, Volume 6, Issue 4, p. 9-17
ISSN: 1045-5736
World Affairs Online
In: Armed forces & society: official journal of the Inter-University Seminar on Armed Forces and Society : an interdisciplinary journal, Volume 4, Issue 1, p. 3-28
ISSN: 0095-327X
Aus indischer Sicht
World Affairs Online
This article addresses the relevance of gender to understand the transformations of civil-military relations in advanced democracies. After clarifying the analytical perspective in an opening section, it examines in a second section the debate over women's roles in the military - the so-called 'rights vs. readiness' debate - to show how gender issues have been both an arena for the expression of civil-military tensions and a constitutive element of civil-military relations. Resorting to available empirical information on Western advanced democracies, it focuses in a third section on the topic of women's military integration, highlighting how it has exerted pressures to bring about greater convergence between armed forces and societies. Since these pressures have not been uniform, the article highlights patterns of similarity and difference among countries, showing how varying constellations of circumstances in both armed forces and societies at large have produced different outcomes. The article makes two claims: that gender issues have become an increasingly important indicator of trends in civil-military relations and that both military effectiveness, and congruence between the armed forces and democratic social values can better be achieved if gender issues are addressed and gender integration is promoted in the military. ; info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
BASE
In: Working Papers, 2000,16
World Affairs Online
This book represents the first attempt to deal with the problem of how to conceptualize the civil-military relations of communist systems within a common intellectual framework. The opening chapters present three major constructs originally designed for analyzing civil-military relations in the USSR: the interest group approach, the institutional congruence approach, and the participatory model. In subsequent chapters the utility of these approaches is tested against a wide variety of communist systems, including those of Cuba, the USSR, China, Romania, Hungary, the GDR, and Poland. In probing these issues for the first time, the authors shed considerable light on the transnational differences and similarities among communist systems, and the dynamics of civil-military relations in all communist systems.
In: The Middle East journal, Volume 50, Issue 1, p. 116-117
ISSN: 0026-3141
World Affairs Online
In: Political science quarterly: PSQ ; the journal public and international affairs, Volume 112, Issue 4, p. 708
ISSN: 0032-3195
In: Foreign affairs: an American quarterly review, Volume 74, Issue 6, p. 137
ISSN: 2327-7793
In: The public manager: the new bureaucrat, Volume 38, Issue 3, p. 75-80
ISSN: 1061-7639