1st Edition

Understanding Military Doctrine A Multidisciplinary Approach

By Harald Hoiback Copyright 2013
    272 Pages
    by Routledge

    272 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book puts military doctrine into a wider perspective, drawing on military history, philosophy, and political science.

    Military doctrines are institutional beliefs about what works in war; given the trauma of 9/11 and the ensuing 'War on Terror', serious divergences over what the message of the 'new' military doctrine ought to be were expected around the world. However, such questions are often drowned in ferocious meta-doctrinal disagreements. What is a doctrine, after all?

    This book provides a theoretical understanding of such questions. Divided into three parts, the author investigates the historical roots of military doctrine and explores its growth and expansion until the present day, and goes on to analyse the main characteristics of a military doctrine. Using a multidisciplinary approach, the book concludes that doctrine can be utilized in three key ways: as a tool of command, as a tool of change, and as a tool of education.

    This book will be of much interest to students of military studies, civil-military relations, strategic studies, and war studies, as well as to students in professional military education.

    Introduction  Part I: Preliminaries  1. Outlines and Sidelines  2. A History of Military Doctrine  Part II: The Anatomy of Doctrine  3. Military Thinking—An Elusive Undertaking  4. Doctrinal Foundationalism  5. Doctrinal Coherentism  6. On Enculturation  7. Authority  Part III: Why Doctrine?  8. Doctrine’s future and versatility  9. Summary and Conclusion

    Biography

    Harald Høiback is a Lieutenant Colonel and lectures at the Norwegian Defence University College, Oslo. He holds a PhD in Philosophy from the University of Oslo (2010).