PLM4600

Strategic studies: a critical introduction

Andrew Butfoy

12 points -2 hours per week -First semester -Clayton

Objectives This subject has three key objectives: (a) to facilitate an understanding of the role of military power in international relations, and the ways in which this might change in the future; (b) to illuminate the strategic implications of perspectives on world politics which stress common and cooperative approaches to security; and (c) to assist students in the identification and critical assessment of the central assumptions and themes in the strategic studies literature.

Synopsis This subject presents strategic studies as a sub-discipline of international relations. Within this setting, the subject has five themes: the relationship between strategic studies and theories of international relations; US policy on nuclear weapons (during and after the Cold War); Australian defence policy (historical and regional contexts and future directions); the search for 'common' and 'cooperative' security; and threats to international security.

Assessment Essay (6000 words): 50% -Examination (3 hours): 50%

Recommended texts

Butfoy A 'Rationalising the bomb? Strategic studies and the US nuclear umbrella' in Australian Journal of Politics and History 40:2, pp 145- 161, 1993
Butfoy A Common security and strategic reform: A critical analysis Macmillan, 1997
Betts R (ed.) Conflict after the cold war: Arguments on causes of war and peace Macmillan, 1994

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