Social Order and the General Theory of Strategy

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A01=Alexander Atkinson
Absolute Form
Armed Power
Artillery Units
Author_Alexander Atkinson
Category=JHB
Category=JP
Category=JW
CCP
CCP Central Committee
Central Soviet Area
Chinese Civil War
Chinese Strategists
Chou En-lai
classical theory
Classical theory of strategy
Clausewitz
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Farm Labour Unions
Free Conception
Great Dam
guerrilla conflict analysis
guerrilla warfare
Guerrilla Zones
insurgency theory
Insurgent Base Areas
international politics
Land Investigation
Land Revolution
military policy
military sociology
Mobile Warfare
Model Base Area
nation state stability
nuclear age
Positional Warfare
Protracted War
protracted warfare
Revolutionary Mass Mobilization
Rural Base Areas
Social order
social order in military strategy
sociological theory
Strategic Counter-offensive
strategic paradigms
strategic thinking
Swift Thrusts
Thin Convention

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367608491
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 04 Nov 2022
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Is there a place left in international politics for the real use of violence as an instrument of policy in the nuclear age? Originally published in 1981, Dr Atkinson attempts to answer this question with new considerations in the presentation of a general theory of strategy. He argues that the classical theory of strategy, so influential for the 19th century and for the better half of the 20th century, was built on a mainly hidden structure of reasoning that still infests theory today. The larger and socially-rooted lessons that insurgent warfare can inform, as best exemplified in the primary sources of the Chinese Civil War period, reveal in a new light this hidden structure of which Clausewitz is the earliest and most eloquent example. By this analysis of the insurgent and classical paradigm opposites the author intends to strip away the blinds of convention still circulating in theory today so that observers and students of international politics may see where new forms of politically motivated violence in the nuclear age seem more than ever to be headed.

Here we have perfect paradigm opposites. In the conventional world battle-field action and ideally 'decisive battle' is the center of all other issues in which such conventional logic in the end sweeps up everything else and runs it back through the logic into success or failure of armed power on the battle-field. Everything hangs on this. In the 'revisionist' insurgent world where social order is weaponized as an object and source of military power through its inherent and valuable (armed) power structures social order replaces narrow battle-field action (ideally focused on 'decisive battle') and alternatively redirects the entire logic and all other considerations, including previously heroic conventional military assets, are remodeled to act against (armed) enemy power structures inherent (as always) in social order for the ultimate object of military victory. Again, everything is on this alone. Which paradigm - one the opposite mirror image of the other - will prevail will depend on the stability and power of the nation state and its institutions, the continued and unhappy collapse on which I base the General Theory.

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