Political and Military Sociology

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A01=Bruce D. McDonald III
Atkinson Index
Author_Bruce D. McDonald III
Brandon Valeriano
Bruce D. McDonald III
Category=JHB
Choong-Nam Kang
Civil Military Cooperation
Common Unit Root Process
comparative political economy
defense
Defense Burden
Defense Growth Relationship
distributive politics
Education Spillover
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eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Feder Ram Model
growth
Hamid E. Ali
High Defense Burdens
Hospice Care
Human Capital Spillover
Human Development Index
Ips Test
Lachezar G. Anguelov
LLC Test
Maximiliano Mendieta
Military Expenditure
Military Spending Patterns
military spending social impact
Neonatal Mortality
Panel Regression Results
Paul Kellogg
Pork Barrel Spending
Quality Enhancement Research Initiative
quantitative policy research
Rapid Military Buildups
relationship
Robert J. Eger III
sector
social program evaluation
Social Spillovers
Strategic Planning Department
Susan G. Sample
Theil Index
Ubah A. Adan
Under-five Mortality
University Faculty Schools
veteran reintegration effects
welfare state analysis

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138530089
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 20 Sep 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Political and Military Sociology, Volume 41 explores the social elements and impact of national defense. The origin of government is a response to a society's common interest in security and defense. In recent years, security and defense issues, and government responses, have become increasingly prominent in societies around the world. Despite intermittent pushes for privatization, however, security and defense have remained core functions of government.

In this volume Bruce D. McDonald III investigates the historiography of the defense-growth relationship. Lachezar G. Anguelov and Robert J. Eger III consider the social impact with a case study of the Republic of Serbia. Maximiliano Mendieta and Bruce D. McDonald III consider the social spillovers of the sector that arise after the completion of a soldier's service. Paul Kellogg considers why some countries have fared well when others have been slow to rebound. Hamid E. Ali studies pork barrel spending in the United States. Susan Sample, Brandon Valeriano, and Choong-Nam Kang broaden the understanding of the defense sector to include its output. Hamid E. Ali and Ubah A. Adan conclude the volume with a study on conflict and infant and child mortality rates.

Traditionally, national defense is viewed solely in military terms. As part of their national security objectives, many defense sectors have undertaken a variety of social programs. While the existence of social programs is known, what remains uncertain is how they spill over from the sector to society at-large and what is the impact of that spillover.

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