War, Peace and International Relations provides an introduction to the strategic history of the past two centuries, showing how those 200 years were shaped and reshaped extensively by war. The book takes a broad view of what was relevant to the causes, courses, and consequences of wars.
Written by leading strategist Professor Colin Gray, the book provides students with a good grounding in the contribution of war to the development of the modern world, from the pre-industrial era to the age of international terrorism and smart weapons.
This second edition has been thoroughly revised and
It is the first one-volume strategic history textbook on the market;It covers all the major wars of the past two centuries;It is up to date and comprehensive, including a new section on the American Civil War, a new chapter on geography and strategy, and completely rewritten chapters on Iraq and Afghanistan in the 2000s and on irregular warfare.This textbook will be essential reading for students of strategic studies, security studies, war studies, international relations and international history.
Colin S. Gray was a British-American strategic thinker and professor of International Relations and Strategic Studies at the University of Reading, where he was the director of the Centre for Strategic Studies. In addition, he was a Senior Associate to the National Institute for Public Policy.
Gray was educated at the University of Manchester and the University of Oxford. He worked at the International Institute for Strategic Studies and the Hudson Institute, before founding the National Institute for Public Policy in Washington, D.C. He also served as a defense adviser both to the British and U.S. governments. Gray served from 1982 until 1987 in the Reagan Administration's General Advisory Committee on Arms Control and Disarmament. Furthermore, he taught at the University of Hull, the University of Lancaster, York University, Toronto and University of British Columbia. Gray published 23 books on military history and strategic studies, as well as numerous articles.
An all around great read, but I especially recommend Chapter 18 on Irregular Warfare. It is a must read. It could stand alone as an essay if you don't have time to read the whole book.
This review was written in 2007, for a former center dedicated to international relations, CSIS Romania and recovered from the web archive. I still agree with most of arguments, but made some small improvements.
The relevance of war in history is the major theme of a new book written by the well-known strategist Colin Gray, War, Peace and International Relations, An Introduction to Strategic Theory, published this year by Routledge. The author has collected his courses, with the intention of providing a clear account of the influence of force and threats upon international relations, during the last three centuries. An interpretation of Clausewitz, mixed with a tendency to conservatism represents the building block of his work.
The object of the book is strategic history, a mixture of political and military domains. Gray defines strategy as “the use of force and the threat” (Gray 2007, 1) to do so, and argues that this factor represents not only the major influence upon international relations, but also, the most important cause of changes in the last two centuries. In his view, the nature of war remains constant in history, only political, economical social and other contexts are variable. The author makes a distinction between war, meaning the “total relationship between belligerents” and warfare, the actual fighting (ibidem, 6). All his premises had some week points.
War, Peace and International Relations, an Introduction to Strategic Theory can be use as a good introduction in modern political-military introduction for students, even taking into account that it`s written in the style of XIX historians, and that some remarks are controversial. Colin Gray compensates with clarity, a good biography, and abstracts of chapters, which make the main ideas easy to comprehend.
Other sources Original version https://web.archive.org/web/200808032... Buzan, Barry. 1991. People, states and fear: an agenda for international security studies. 2nd ed, Boulder: L. Rienner.
Masterfully explains why the study of strategy remains relevant today and can help guide today’s strategists in the use of or threat of the use of force in achieving ends determined via a political process.
Într-o structură de manual, eminentul analist și profesor tratează istoria influenței recursului și amenințărilor cu recursul la forța motivată politic. Istoria strategică încearcă să fie explicată prin teoriile lui Carl von Clausewitz din ”Despre război”, o carte care, în ciuda vechimii considerabile, rămâne actuală prin tematică și problematică. Interesante sunt aspectele referitoare la viziunea asupra războiului, despărțit indubitabil și inexpugnabil de luptă la nivel de semnificație: războiul e o continuare a activității politice, războiul trebuie purtat prin menținerea unui echilibru în cadrul -trinității- pasiune/ostilitate, hazard/creativitate, rațiunea politicii. Cu precădere interesant mi s-a părut capitolul 18, unde se tratează războiul neregulat: istoric, ce înseamnă în economia războiului strategic, cum a evololuat și ce înseamnă el în timpurile moderne. https://recenziilesipovestiletale.wor...