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Full Description
How does civilian control affect military effectiveness? Can a balance be achieved between the two? In-country experts address these questions through a set of rich comparative case studies. Covering the spectrum from democracies to authoritarian regimes, they explore the nexus of control and effectiveness to reveal its importance for national security and the legitimacy of both political order and the military institution.
Contents
Civil-Military Relations: Why Control Is Not Enough
T.C. Bruneau and A. Croissant
The Theoretical Landscape
D. Kuehn
Measuring Effectiveness and Control
T. Eschenauer-Engler and J. Kamerling
Established Democracies
The United States: Planning and Managing Control and Effectiveness
T-D. Young
Japan: Separation, Control, and Effectiveness
C. Aoi
Germany: The Bundeswehr and the Limits of Strategic Culture
S.B. Gareis
Emerging Democracies
Chile: Defense Governance and Democratic Consolidation
C. Solar
Tunisia: Patterns and Implications of Civilian Control
N. Jebnoun
Indonesia: The Military's Growing Assertiveness on Nondefense Missions
A.B. Gunawan
Hybrid and Authoritarian Regimes
Russia: The Armed Forces as Patriotic Glue
O. Fridman
Turkey: Strengthening Personalized Political Control
Z. Sentek
Egypt: An Ineffective Military Beyond Control
R. Springborg
China: Traditions, Institutions, and Effectiveness
Y. Ji.
Conclusion
The Nexus of Control and Effectiveness
T.C. Bruneau and A. Croissant