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  • Stephen Van Evers, Sidharth Shah (Editors)

    Published by The Tobin Project (Cambridge, Massachusetts), 2010

    Seller: Palimpsest Scholarly Books & Services, Brooktondale, NY, U.S.A.

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    Soft cover. Condition: As New. Softcover volume, measuring approximately 6.25" x 9.25", is like new. 185 pages. In "The Prudent Use of Power in American National Security Strategy," a compendium of ten essays originally presented at the Tobin Project's December 2009 conference, leading scholars examine the utility of "nonkinetic" (or nonmilitary) power in U.S. national security policy. The authors consider the potential risks and benefits of shifting to a more prudent, or restrained, use of "kinetic" (or military) power in U.S. foreign policy. This scholarship aims to test the limits of kinetic and nonkinetic power in dealing with national security challenges and to explore how and where each can be used most effectively. This compendium brings together a set of scholars from a variety of disciplines, including Jeremi Suri (History, University of Wisconsin, Madison), Carolyne Davidson (History, Yale University), Stephen Van Evera (Political Science, MIT), Daniel Byman (Political Science, Georgetown University), and Deepak Malhotra (Management, Harvard Business School).