Mobilizing force : linking security threats, militarization, and civilian control /
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Imprint: | Boulder, Colorado : Lynne Rienner Publishers, Inc., 2021. ©2021 |
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Description: | 1 online resource ( vii, 287 pages) : illustrations, maps |
Language: | English |
Subject: | |
Format: | E-Resource Book |
URL for this record: | http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/12544402 |
Table of Contents:
- Intro
- Title page
- copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Ch1- Militarization: The Missing Link BetweenThreats and Civilian Control
- Civilian Control, Security Threats, and the Need to Account for Militarization
- Structure of the Book
- Table 1.1 Case Selection Criteria and Cases
- PART 1- External Threats
- Ch2- Israel: Remilitarized Threats and Military Contrarianism
- Background: Militarization, Demilitarization, Threats, and Civilian Control Prior to 2000
- Remilitarization and Threats Since the 2000s
- Remilitarized Threats in the Post-Intifada Era
- Military Contrarianism
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Ch3- Japan: "Normalizing" the Japan Self-Defense Forces?
- Japan's Security Threats
- Militarization: Changes in Security-Related Measures
- The Discursive Spread of Militarization and Resistances
- Militarization and Accountability
- Conclusion
- Ch4- South Korea: Media-Driven Amplification of Threats
- Figure 4.1 An Analytic Model for the Democratic Control of the Military
- Militarization, Election, and the Media
- Table 4.1 An Analytic Framework
- North Korean Threats in the Disputed Waters
- Figure 4.2 The Northern Limit Line in the West Sea
- Figure 4.3 North Korea's Military Provocations and Percent of NLL Provocations to Total Provocations
- Détente Dilemma and Antimilitarization Policy of the Liberal Government
- Figure 4.4 Export Specialization Index and NLL Violations by North Korea
- Media Response to Antimilitarization Policy and Civil-Military Conflict
- Figure 4.5 Comparison of the Level of Militarism of Active-Duty Soldiers and Civilians with Military Experience
- Figure 4.6 Percent of NLL Violations Reported by the Media and Total Number of NLL Violations per Year(reported by the Ministry of National Defense)
- Figure 4.7 Percent of Warning Fire on NLL Violations and Percent of Media Coverage on NLL Violations
- Statistical Test: Impact of Media Coverage on Democratic Control of the Military
- Table 4.2 Descriptive Statistics for the Measures Used in the Analysis
- Table 4.3 Multivariate Logistic Regression Estimates
- Conclusion
- Appendix 4.1 Number of NLL Violations by Year
- Note
- Ch5- United States: The "Angry American" and Transnational Terrorism
- How Militarization Shapes Threat Perception
- Terrorism and Militarization Before 9/11
- Terrorism and Militarization After 9/11
- Terrorism, Discourse, and the Erosion of Civilian Control
- Conclusion
- Notes
- PART 2- Domestic Threats
- Ch6- Colombia: Confronting Insurgency, Drug Cartels, and Narcoterrorists
- Hybrid Threats to Colombian Order
- Militarizing the State Reaction
- Legitimizing Militarization in Colombia
- Democratic Control of the Military
- Conclusion
- Ch7- El Salvador: Old Habits Die Hard