Civil-Military Relations: The State and Organized Violence, Fall 2012
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Responsible: Dr. Gary Schaub, Senior Researcher, Centre for Military Studies, Department of Political Science, University of Copenhagen
From: 2012/11/26 to: 2012/11/30
Subscription Deadline: 2012/08/26
Place: Room 4.2.50, Department of Political Science, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen
Fee: 80 Euro
ECTS (Get approval from your own department!!!): 5
Short description: This PhD course has five purposes:
First, to offer a comprehensive introduction to and discussion of central concepts, issues, and areas of research within the field of civil-military relations.
Second, to introduce participants to the latest research and debates within the field.
Third, to facilitate new bonds and contacts between scholars with common academic interests.
Fourth, to offer an opportunity for the participants to write a scholarly paper on topic of civil-military relations that is based upon the premises and framework of the course that will be the basis for a chapter in an edited volume to be produced by the group.
Fifth, to receive feedback from senior scholars on work-in-progress
Description: Civil-military
relations concerns the interaction of the military and the state or,
more broadly, between armed forces and society. The
relationship between civil authority and the military has evolved
along with the nature of states, societies, war, and the military
profession, but the basic dilemma remains the same: ensuring
protection by and
from the armed
forces. Modern
polities are governed by states, which possess
a monopoly over the legitimate use of force within a defined
territory to enforce its edicts on the population. The armed forces
embody that monopoly and serve three primary purposes: external
defense, internal security, and promotion of patriotism through
indoctrination and provision of public goods. This five
day course seeks to develop this argument, exploring the social,
political, historical, cultural, and strategic influences that have
determined the ways and degrees to which societies have used
institutions to tame violence and achieve internal and external
security. As such, it is interdisciplinary in scope and method. We invite
PhD students from a variety of fields of research―including
strategic studies, sociology, political science, military history,
anthropology, public administration, and development studies―to
submit a statement of their interest in the topic of civil-military
relations and the development of state institutions that will form
the basis of their paper for the course. The paper will be due one
week prior to the commencement of the course so that all participants
can read and comment on it. Length may not exceed 10.000 words
including references and notes Agenda: The PhD
course presents an argument about the institutionalization of
violence in societies that is developed over the course of five days: Day
1: Theories and Concepts of Civil-Military Relations How
have scholars characterized relations between societies and their
armed forces? What
institutions, both formal and informal, govern these relations in
different societies and polities? Day
2: The State and the Military in Historical Perspective What
is the relationship between state building, the military, and war? What
is the relationship between states, mercenaries, militaries, and
police forces? Day
3: The Institutionalization of Violence How
is it that civil control of the military came to be seen as a
positive norm? What
is the relationship between regime type and civil control of the
military? Day
4: The Professionalization of Civil-Military Relations What
is the profession of arms? How
is it related to civil control of the military? Is
there a civil (or civilian) counterpart to the profession of arms? Day
5: Civil-Military Relations and Strategy How
do the dynamics of civil-military relations relate to the initiation
and termination of war? How
do these dynamics affect success and failure in armed conflict? Tentative
reading list: Day
1: Theories and Concepts of Civil-Military Relations Schaub,
Jr. Gary. “Civil-Military Relations,” in The
Encyclopedia of Political Science, Volume
1. (Washington: CQ Press, 2011), pages
238-239. Feld,
Maury D. The Structure of Violence: Armed
Forces as Social Systems. (Beverly Hills:
Sage Publications, 1977). Feaver,
Peter D. “The Civil-Military Problematique:
Huntington, Janowitz, and the Question of Civilian Control,” Armed
Forces and Society 23, 2 (Winter 1996). Day
2: The State and the Military in Historical Perspective Tilly,
Charles. Coercion, Capital, and European
States: AD 990-1992. (Cambridge: Blackwell,
1990). Downing,
Brian M. The Military Revolution and
Political Change: Origins of Democracy and Autocracy in Early Modern
Europe. (Princeton: Princeton University
Press, 1992). Dolman,
Everett C. The Warrior State: How Military
Organization Structures Politics. (New York:
Palgrave, 2004). Day
3: The Institutionalization of Violence Miewald,
Robert D. “Weberian Bureaucracy and the Military Model,” Public
Administration Review 30, 2 (March/April
1970). Avant,
Deborah. “From Mercenary to Citizen Armies: Explaining Change in
the Practice of War,” International
Organization 54, 1 (Winter 2000). Kemp,
Kenneth W. and Charles Hudin. “Civil Supremacy Over the Military:
Its Nature and Limits,” Armed
Forces and Society
19, 1 (Fall 1992). Lasswell,
Harold D. “The Garrison State,” The
American Journal of Sociology 46, 4 (January
1941). Perlmutter,
Amos. “The Praetorian State and the Praetorian Army: Toward a
Taxonomy of Civil-Military Relations in Developing Polities,”
Comparative Politics
1, 3 (April 1969). Welty,
Gordon. “A Critique of the Theory of the Praetorian State,”
Nature, Society, and Thought
3, 1 (1990). Brooks,
Risa A. “Militaries and Political Activity in Democracies,” in
Suzanne C. Nielsen and Don M. Snider, editors. American
Civil-Military Relations: The Soldier and the State in a New Era.
(Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2009).
Day
4: The Professionalization of Civil-Military Relations Abbott,
Andrew. “The Army and the Theory of Professions,” in Lloyd J.
Matthews, editor. The Future of the Army
Profession. (Boston: McGraw-Hill Primis
Custom Publishing, 2002). Burk,
James. “Expertise, Jurisdiction, and Legitimacy of the Military
Profession,” in Lloyd J. Matthews, editor. The
Future of the Army Profession. (Boston:
McGraw-Hill Primis Custom Publishing, 2002). Huntington,
Samuel P. The Soldier and the State: The
Theory and Politics of Civil-Military Relations.
(Cambridge: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1957). Teitler,
G. The Genesis of the Professional Officers’
Corps. (Beverly Hills: Sage Publications,
1977). Diamond,
Larry and Marc F. Plattner, editors. Civil-Military
Relations and Democracy. (Baltimore: The
Johns Hopkins University Press, 1996). Day
5: Civil-Military Relations and Strategy Brooks,
Risa A. Shaping Strategy: The Civil-Military
Relations of Strategic Assessment.
(Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2008). Peter
J. Roman and David W. Tarr, “Military Professionalism and
Policymaking: Is there a Gap at the Top? If So, Does it Matter?”
in Peter D. Feaver and Richard H. Kohn, editors. Soldiers
and Civilians: The Civil-Military Gap and American National
Security. (Cambridge: MIT Press, 2001),
pages 403-428. Strachan,
Hew. “Strategy or Alibi? Obama, McChrystal, and the Operational
Level of War,” Survival
52, 5 (October-November 2010). Nielsen,
Suzanne C. “Civil-Military Relations Theory and Military
Effectiveness,” Public Administration and
Management 10, 2 (2005). Maximum
number of participants: 15 Papers: Please, observe concerning your paper that it should be sent no later that Nov 9 to:
paper@polforsk.dk: - it should be in PDF-format,
- the file name should start with YOUR SURNAME and include the
titel and number of pages.
- there should be NO BLANKS or special characters (parantheses, ö,
æ, ø, å, é, etc) in the file name
- example: doe_john-politics_of_lazyness-12_pages.pdf
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