Diplomacy, War and Technology Since 1830
Maurice Pearton
288 pages, 6 x 9
Paper ISBN 978-0-7006-0254-4, $14.95
"No other book combines so
much of modern history with so rich an exploration of related
factors in industry, finance, education, and technology, as well
as statecraft. Combining strands of history from all these areas,
Pearton makes an unusually complete and cogent case for the breakdown
of traditional distinctions between the civil and the military,
and even between war and peace. This is an excellent work of
military and economic history."--Russell F. Weigley,
author of The American Way of War
"This is an interesting and very useful book. It traces
the impact of evolving military technology on the national security
problem from 1830 to the present. This subject sets into context
the current debate about arms racing and the military-industrial
complex, and the author argues convincingly that the impact of
military technology on the state has been so great as to call
into question much of the traditional distinction between war
and peace. His historical approach adds needed depth and perspective
to many contemporary discussions of the arms problem, and his
good sense of historical and economic factors avoids both the
narrow military and technical emphasis and the moralistic futility
which too often afflict work on this subject. The book is well
written, and an entertaining read. I recommend it as an illuminating
and incisive inquiry into a phenomenon of unquestioned importance."--Barry
Buzan of the University of Warwick, writing in International
Affairs
"All those involved in the decision-making process of
government would do well to study Mr. Pearton's splendid book."--The
Economist
MAURICE PEARTON is a visiting fellow of the Centre
for International Studies at Cambridge University in England.
He was educated at Oxford and the London School of Economics,
where he took his doctorate in political economy.
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