Neoclassical Realism and the Underdevelopment of China's Nuclear Doctrine
2018
JZ2-6530
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Title
Neoclassical Realism and the Underdevelopment of China's Nuclear Doctrine
Author
ISBN
9783319786407
3319786407
9783319786391
3319786393
3319786407
9783319786391
3319786393
Published
Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Palgrave Pivot, 2018
Language
English
Description
1 online resource (IX, 167 pages 1 illustration) online resource
Item Number
10.1007/978-3-319-78640-7 doi
9783319786391
9783319786391
Call Number
JZ2-6530
Dewey Decimal Classification
355.02170951
Summary
Paolo Rosa is Professor of Political Science at the School of International Studies of the University of Trento, Italy. He is an associate of the EU Non-proliferation Consortium. His main research interests include Foreign Policy Analysis, Italian Foreign and Military Behaviour, Chinese Politics, Strategic Culture, Quantitative Analysis of Conflicts, and Peace Research. This book addresses the under-researched discourse of the evolution of Chinese nuclear posture, and in particular, explains the absence from this evolution of a coherent and well-defined operational doctrine. Using a neoclassical realist framework, the book explains why China, after having launched a crash programme in the mid-1950s to develop a nuclear deterrent, did not debate a clear operational doctrine with respect to targeting and employment until the mid-1980s
Note
Paolo Rosa is Professor of Political Science at the School of International Studies of the University of Trento, Italy. He is an associate of the EU Non-proliferation Consortium. His main research interests include Foreign Policy Analysis, Italian Foreign and Military Behaviour, Chinese Politics, Strategic Culture, Quantitative Analysis of Conflicts, and Peace Research. This book addresses the under-researched discourse of the evolution of Chinese nuclear posture, and in particular, explains the absence from this evolution of a coherent and well-defined operational doctrine. Using a neoclassical realist framework, the book explains why China, after having launched a crash programme in the mid-1950s to develop a nuclear deterrent, did not debate a clear operational doctrine with respect to targeting and employment until the mid-1980s
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Table of Contents
1. Introduction: Competing explanations for the underdevelopment of China's nuclear doctrine
2. A neoclassical realist approach to military doctrines
3. China's nuclear programme: Origins and progress
4. Nuclear doctrine as a continuation of factional politics by other means, 1964-1971
5. Elite stability and nuclear doctrine formulation, 1978-1989
6. Conclusions
2. A neoclassical realist approach to military doctrines
3. China's nuclear programme: Origins and progress
4. Nuclear doctrine as a continuation of factional politics by other means, 1964-1971
5. Elite stability and nuclear doctrine formulation, 1978-1989
6. Conclusions