This book examines to what extent the invention and first use of nuclear weapons was a turning point in the history of warfare and strategy(to what extent was it a mere continuation or perfection of air power strategy? Were the casualty numbers really unprecedented?), the ethics of war (was this form of war against civilians unprecedented?), and it asks whether it was an expression of total war or did it create total wa
The development of atomic bombs under the auspices of the U. S. Army’s Manhattan Project during Worl...
This chapter outlines the transforming logic of nuclear weapons and explores at a conceptual level t...
During World War II the British Royal Air Force undertook a campaign of area bombing of German citie...
Nuclear weapons could very well be responsible for the end of civilization, as we know it. Developed...
A freshman major in modern languages with an emphasis in Spanish and French from Spokane, Washington...
Thinkers speak of weapons as “intrinsically ” immoral, referring to weapons that are “inherently cru...
This book has two major objectives. First, it sets out to chart in detail the British experience wit...
Why did Britain decide in 1947 to build an atomic bomb? What plans were there for using it? Employin...
This book fills a clear gap in the literature for a technically-focused book covering nuclear prolif...
Throughout history, humans have demonstrated a proclivity for using violence against one another as ...
Civil defence was an integral part of Britain's modern history. Throughout the cold war it was a cen...
In a powerful and provocative essay published in the New Republic in 1981, Paul Fussell, an English ...
rigorous and objective ethical analysis of nuclear deterrence, this book provides a wide-ranging dis...
The question of why states maintain nuclear weapons typically receives short shrift: it’s security, ...
Aerial bombardment remains important to military strategy, but the norms governing bombing and the h...
The development of atomic bombs under the auspices of the U. S. Army’s Manhattan Project during Worl...
This chapter outlines the transforming logic of nuclear weapons and explores at a conceptual level t...
During World War II the British Royal Air Force undertook a campaign of area bombing of German citie...
Nuclear weapons could very well be responsible for the end of civilization, as we know it. Developed...
A freshman major in modern languages with an emphasis in Spanish and French from Spokane, Washington...
Thinkers speak of weapons as “intrinsically ” immoral, referring to weapons that are “inherently cru...
This book has two major objectives. First, it sets out to chart in detail the British experience wit...
Why did Britain decide in 1947 to build an atomic bomb? What plans were there for using it? Employin...
This book fills a clear gap in the literature for a technically-focused book covering nuclear prolif...
Throughout history, humans have demonstrated a proclivity for using violence against one another as ...
Civil defence was an integral part of Britain's modern history. Throughout the cold war it was a cen...
In a powerful and provocative essay published in the New Republic in 1981, Paul Fussell, an English ...
rigorous and objective ethical analysis of nuclear deterrence, this book provides a wide-ranging dis...
The question of why states maintain nuclear weapons typically receives short shrift: it’s security, ...
Aerial bombardment remains important to military strategy, but the norms governing bombing and the h...
The development of atomic bombs under the auspices of the U. S. Army’s Manhattan Project during Worl...
This chapter outlines the transforming logic of nuclear weapons and explores at a conceptual level t...
During World War II the British Royal Air Force undertook a campaign of area bombing of German citie...