The Uneasy Balance

The Uneasy Balance
Title The Uneasy Balance PDF eBook
Author Riccardo Alcaro
Publisher Edizioni Nuova Cultura
Total Pages 160
Release 2013
Genre Political Science
ISBN 886812050X

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Uneasy Balance

Uneasy Balance
Title Uneasy Balance PDF eBook
Author Thomas S. Langston
Publisher JHU Press
Total Pages 209
Release 2004-12-01
Genre Political Science
ISBN 0801881455

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In the first book to focus on civil-military tensions after American wars, Thomas Langston challenges conventional theory by arguing that neither civilian nor military elites deserve victory in this perennial struggle. What is needed instead, he concludes, is balance. In America's worst postwar episodes, those that followed the Civil War and the Vietnam War, balance was conspicuously absent. In the late 1860s and into the 1870s, the military became the tool of a divisive partisan program. As a result, when Reconstruction ended, so did popular support of the military. After the Vietnam War, military leaders were too successful in defending their institution against civilian commanders, leading some observers to declare a crisis in civil-military relations even before Bill Clinton became commander-in-chief. Is American military policy balanced today? No, but it may well be headed in that direction. At the end of the 1990s there was still no clear direction in military policy. The officer corps stubbornly clung to a Cold War force structure. A civilian-minded commander-in-chief, meanwhile, stretched a shrinking force across the globe. With the shocking events of September 11, 2001, clarifying the seriousness of the post-Cold War military policy, we may at last be moving toward a true realignment of civilian and military imperatives.

The Uneasy Balance : a Study of Polarity in the Work of Stephen Crane

The Uneasy Balance : a Study of Polarity in the Work of Stephen Crane
Title The Uneasy Balance : a Study of Polarity in the Work of Stephen Crane PDF eBook
Author Ellen Raisanen Brown
Publisher
Total Pages 248
Release 1969
Genre
ISBN

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Uneasy Balance

Uneasy Balance
Title Uneasy Balance PDF eBook
Author Thomas S. Langston
Publisher JHU Press
Total Pages 220
Release 2003-11-04
Genre History
ISBN 9780801874215

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In the first book to focus on civil-military tensions after American wars, Thomas Langston challenges conventional theory by arguing that neither civilian nor military elites deserve victory in this perennial struggle. What is needed instead, he concludes, is balance. In America's worst postwar episodes, those that followed the Civil War and the Vietnam War, balance was conspicuously absent. In the late 1860s and into the 1870s, the military became the tool of a divisive partisan program. As a result, when Reconstruction ended, so did popular support of the military. After the Vietnam War, military leaders were too successful in defending their institution against civilian commanders, leading some observers to declare a crisis in civil-military relations even before Bill Clinton became commander-in-chief. Is American military policy balanced today? No, but it may well be headed in that direction. At the end of the 1990s there was still no clear direction in military policy. The officer corps stubbornly clung to a Cold War force structure. A civilian-minded commander-in-chief, meanwhile, stretched a shrinking force across the globe. With the shocking events of September 11, 2001, clarifying the seriousness of the post-Cold War military policy, we may at last be moving toward a true realignment of civilian and military imperatives.

The Uneasy Balance

The Uneasy Balance
Title The Uneasy Balance PDF eBook
Author Ellen Ann Raisanen Brown
Publisher
Total Pages 111
Release 1969
Genre
ISBN

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The Uneasy Chair

The Uneasy Chair
Title The Uneasy Chair PDF eBook
Author Wallace Stegner
Publisher Vintage
Total Pages 583
Release 2015-02-18
Genre Biography & Autobiography
ISBN 1101911697

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Bernard DeVoto was a wild intellectual from the Rocky Mountains, a rebel, iconoclast, and idealist who fled his stifling small town for the intellectual freedom and community of Harvard. While he settled eastward in his career as a novelist, professor, editor, historian, and critic, he continued to love, to a point of passion, western openness, freedom, and society. National Book Award– and Pulitzer Prize–winning author and fellow westerner Wallace Stegner's life intersected with Devoto's many times, first by accident and later by friendship and example. They were kindred spirits, both westerners by birth, upbringing, and demeanor, novelists by vocation, teachers by necessity, and historians and conservationists by a sheer compulsion inspired by the region that shaped them.

Uneasy Manhood

Uneasy Manhood
Title Uneasy Manhood PDF eBook
Author Robert Hicks
Publisher Fleming H Revell Company
Total Pages 251
Release 1997-04-01
Genre Psychology
ISBN 9780800756161

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Chaplain Robert Hicks asks why men feel so uneasy as friends, fathers, and husbands--and finds the answer in our changing and confusing culture. He points the way to a strong, balanced manhood in relationship with God.