Britain’s domestic use of military forces in non-combat roles, today known as military assistance to civil authorities, has evolved path dependently, over the longue durée, alongside its domestic security institutions and legal precedents. Viewed wholistically, this evolution can be described as parabolic. The mili-tary’s domestic role reached its apogee early, during Oliver Cromwell’s dictator-ship in 1655– 1657, when he divided civil authority between 15 major-generals. For the next two centuries, civilian leaders rolled back the military’s domestic prerogatives. By the 20th century, however, memories of 17th century abuses had faded such that the military again came to be regarded by politicians as a solution to emer...
Peter Feaver’s agency theory of civil–military relations posits that within democratic countries the...
“Judging Empire” examines the culture of the British Army during its transformation from a national ...
A compelling history of the British Army in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries-showing how the ...
Arguably the closest that Britain has ever come to military rule was at certain times during the per...
The United Kingdom practiced foreign military intervention more than thirty times in more than twent...
This volume reviews the pre-war rise of militarism and dictatorship in Germany, Italy and Japan and ...
Britain prides itself on its civil tradition of policing: the British police constable is supposed t...
This paper argues that military law has undergone a long-term process of change. Previously an auton...
In the United Kingdom and a number of comparable countries, notably the United States, Canada and Au...
Parliamentary approval can be of crucial importance to ensure the democratic legitimacy of military ...
The aim of this work is to further research into the English army through the comparison of the prev...
Civil-military relations establishes the civilian control over the military to protect democratic va...
Military security is a concept within a system of domains, types, sectors of national security (stat...
This paper focuses on the military response to London’s Gordon Riots of June 1780. It shows how sold...
It is widely assumed, at least from a Western perspective, that the armed forces provide national de...
Peter Feaver’s agency theory of civil–military relations posits that within democratic countries the...
“Judging Empire” examines the culture of the British Army during its transformation from a national ...
A compelling history of the British Army in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries-showing how the ...
Arguably the closest that Britain has ever come to military rule was at certain times during the per...
The United Kingdom practiced foreign military intervention more than thirty times in more than twent...
This volume reviews the pre-war rise of militarism and dictatorship in Germany, Italy and Japan and ...
Britain prides itself on its civil tradition of policing: the British police constable is supposed t...
This paper argues that military law has undergone a long-term process of change. Previously an auton...
In the United Kingdom and a number of comparable countries, notably the United States, Canada and Au...
Parliamentary approval can be of crucial importance to ensure the democratic legitimacy of military ...
The aim of this work is to further research into the English army through the comparison of the prev...
Civil-military relations establishes the civilian control over the military to protect democratic va...
Military security is a concept within a system of domains, types, sectors of national security (stat...
This paper focuses on the military response to London’s Gordon Riots of June 1780. It shows how sold...
It is widely assumed, at least from a Western perspective, that the armed forces provide national de...
Peter Feaver’s agency theory of civil–military relations posits that within democratic countries the...
“Judging Empire” examines the culture of the British Army during its transformation from a national ...
A compelling history of the British Army in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries-showing how the ...