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Full Description
The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) has since its foundation in 1949 been the principal body of the Western security order, and remains as important in the 2020s as it was in the 1950s. This Handbook offers the most extensive treatment of the Alliance published in the last two decades, providing detailed coverage of NATO allies, policies, and organizational structures. It brings together internationally renowned scholars who interrogate NATO's actions from historical, theoretical, and empirical perspectives.
The Handbook is divided into nine parts. Following an introductory part offering a thematic overview of NATO, framed by different approaches to domestic politics and global order, the second part explores three broad questions - what is NATO for, who is NATO for, and whither NATO? Part Three is more expressly theoretical, providing multi-perspectival analyses of the Alliance. Part Four then turns to how NATO works as a political-military alliance. Parts Five and Six are concerned with what NATO does in practical terms - how it addresses a wide range of security threats and what operations it has mounted in response. Part Seven looks at some of NATO's most significant allies including France, Germany, Italy, Poland, Turkey, the United Kingdom, and the United States. Part Eight, meanwhile, is concerned with partnerships and key relationships beyond NATO's membership - looking at Australia, Georgia, Ukraine, Russia, China, the European Union, and the European neutrals as well as ties to states in the Gulf, the Middle East, and North Africa. The final part of the volume offers reflections on NATO's recent past and possible lines of future development.
Contents
Part I. Context
1: James Sperling and Mark Webber: Understanding NATO
2: Trine Flockhart: Global Order
3: Stephanie C. Hofmann and Michael John Williams: Domestic Politics
Part II. Questions
4: Michael Clarke: What is NATO for (Redux)?
5: Andrew T. Wolff: Who is NATO for?
6: Stanley R. Sloan: Whither NATO? A History of NATO's Futures
Part III. Perspectives
7: Seth A. Johnston: Realisms
8: Sebastian Harnisch and Florian Böller: Liberalisms
9: Alexandra Gheciu: Security Community: Identity, Practices, and Trust
10: Katharine A. M. Wright: Gender
11: Rita Floyd: Securitization, Desecuritization, and Just Securitization
12: Maria Mälksoo: Risk, Resilience, and Resistance
13: Gabi Schlag: Visual Discourses of Identity Making
14: Jordan Becker: Strategic Culture
Part IV. Strategy, Policy, and Command
15: R. James Orr: The North Atlantic Treaty
16: Lawrence Freedman and Jeffrey H. Michaels: Strategy
17: John R. Deni: Doctrine
18: Sebastian Mayer: The International Staff
19: Paal Sigurd Hilde: Military and Command Structures
20: Maryann Foster: Defence Planning and Force Generation
21: Ian Davis: Representation and Decision-making
22: Ryan C. Hendrickson: The Secretary General
Part V. Deterrence, Defence, and Security
23: David S. Yost: Nuclear Deterrence
24: Stephan Frühling: Ballistic Missile Defence
25: Jens Ringsmose: Conventional Force Posture
26: Julian Lindley-French: Cybrid Warfare
27: Jamie Shea: Non-Traditional Security Threats
28: Cornelia Baciu: COVID-19, Crisis Management, and Civil Emergency Response
29: James Sperling: Emerging and Disruptive Technologies
30: Benjamin Zyla: Burden-sharing
Part VI. Operations
31: Jonathan Marcus: Bosnia
32: Martin A. Smith: Kosovo
33: Kjell Engelbrekt and Braxton Palmer: Libya
34: Sten Rynning: Afghanistan
35: Brooke A. Smith-Windsor: Maritime Operations
36: Thierry Tardy: Counter-terrorism and Projecting Stability
37: Linde Desmaele and Luis Simón: Forward Deployment and Reassurance
Part VII. Key Allies
38: James Goldgeier: The United States
39: Andrew M. Dorman and Matthew Uttley: The United Kingdom
40: Olivier Schmitt: France
41: Tom Dyson: Germany
42: Luca Ratti: Italy
43: Wojciech Lorenz: Poland
44: Tarik Oguzlu: Turkey
Part VIII. Key Relationships
45: Magnus Petersson: Partnerships
46: Richard G. Whitman: The European Union
47: Andrew Cottey: The European Neutrals
48: Tracey German: Georgia and Ukraine
49: Alessandro Marrone: The Mediterranean Dialogue
50: Eleonora Ardemagni: The Istanbul Cooperation Initiative
51: Ben Schreer: Australia
52: Roland Dannreuther: Russia
53: Andrew Cottey and Mark Webber: China
Part IX. Conclusion
54: Alexander Moens and Alexandra Richards: NATO's Redoubled Relevance