Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Civil–Military Relations

View through CrossRef
Civil–military relations is an interdisciplinary area of research, reflecting the work of political scientists, military, sociologists, and historians. History and culture, the constitution of the state and the statutes and practices arising therefrom, changes in the international security environment, technology, the character of conflict, and the changing concept of “soldier-hood” all influence the civil–military relations of a state. There are many possible patterns of civil–military relations that provide different answers to the questions of who controls the military and how, the degree of military influence appropriate for a given society, the appropriate role of the military in a given polity, who serves, and the effectiveness of the military instrument that a given civil–military relations produces. Moreover, there is no “general” or “unified field” theory that successfully explains all of these patterns. For a variety of reasons, Samuel Huntington's institutional theory remains the dominant paradigm for examining civil–military relations. When it comes to the question of civilian control of the military, Peter Feaver’s agency theory corrects some of the flaws in Huntington’s theory. Morris Janowitz and the military sociologists also provide useful insights, especially regarding the question of who serves and related issues. In the case of concordance theory, critics argue that the definition of military intervention sets the bar too low to be meaningful. Ultimately, the patterns of civil–military relations affect national security because of their impact on strategic assessment.
Title: Civil–Military Relations
Description:
Civil–military relations is an interdisciplinary area of research, reflecting the work of political scientists, military, sociologists, and historians.
History and culture, the constitution of the state and the statutes and practices arising therefrom, changes in the international security environment, technology, the character of conflict, and the changing concept of “soldier-hood” all influence the civil–military relations of a state.
There are many possible patterns of civil–military relations that provide different answers to the questions of who controls the military and how, the degree of military influence appropriate for a given society, the appropriate role of the military in a given polity, who serves, and the effectiveness of the military instrument that a given civil–military relations produces.
Moreover, there is no “general” or “unified field” theory that successfully explains all of these patterns.
For a variety of reasons, Samuel Huntington's institutional theory remains the dominant paradigm for examining civil–military relations.
When it comes to the question of civilian control of the military, Peter Feaver’s agency theory corrects some of the flaws in Huntington’s theory.
Morris Janowitz and the military sociologists also provide useful insights, especially regarding the question of who serves and related issues.
In the case of concordance theory, critics argue that the definition of military intervention sets the bar too low to be meaningful.
Ultimately, the patterns of civil–military relations affect national security because of their impact on strategic assessment.

Related Results

Young Australians’ Attitudes to the Military and Military Service
Young Australians’ Attitudes to the Military and Military Service
What are young Australians’ understandings of, and attitudes to, the military and military service? This article describes a pilot study of 320 young Australian university students...
Integrated defence workforces: Challenges and enablers of military–civilian personnel collaboration
Integrated defence workforces: Challenges and enablers of military–civilian personnel collaboration
Abstract Defence organisations are unique in that they comprise integrated military and civilian personnel working in partnership with each other (e.g., in headquart...
Politics in Uniforms: Military Influence in Politics and Conflictual State Behavior
Politics in Uniforms: Military Influence in Politics and Conflictual State Behavior
This dissertation examines how the state-building process relates to civil-military relations and how political influence of the military affects state's conflict behavior. By doin...
Leaders, Generals, Juntas: The Military in Politics and International Conflict Initiation
Leaders, Generals, Juntas: The Military in Politics and International Conflict Initiation
International conflict—war, crises, international disputes, and rivalries between states—has a clear influence on the military’s role in politics and vice versa. Given that the mil...
Activities of military administrations under martial law in Ukraine
Activities of military administrations under martial law in Ukraine
The relevance of the subject under study is conditioned upon the fact that in Ukraine, during the period of the legal regime of martial law, special bodies of public power with the...
Military History
Military History
Until fairly recently, most African military history was portrayed in terms of antithetical stereotypes. Until about the mid-20th century, Western observers often described a “dark...
Media and Murder in Military Barracks: Sociological Analysis of the Murder of Isaah Mobila in the Northern Region of Ghana.
Media and Murder in Military Barracks: Sociological Analysis of the Murder of Isaah Mobila in the Northern Region of Ghana.
Purpose: Military brutalities continue to occur in Africa notwithstanding a momentous drop in military coups. Military-civilian relations are still problematic and complex since in...

Back to Top