1st Edition
Security Studies in a New Era of Maritime Competition
1. Too Important to Be Left to the Admirals: The Need to Study Maritime Great-Power Competition
Jonathan D. Caverley and Peter Dombrowski
2. The Influence of Sea Power on Politics: Domain- and Platform-Specific Attributes of Material Capabilities
Erik Gartzke and Jon R. Lindsay
3. Clashes at Sea: Explaining the Onset, Militarization, and Resolution of Diplomatic Maritime Claims
Sara McLaughlin Mitchell
4. Cruising for a Bruising: Maritime Competition in an Anti-Access Age
Jonathan D. Caverley and Peter Dombrowski
5. All-In or All-Out: Why Insularity Pushes and Pulls American Grand Strategy to Extremes
Paul van Hooft
6. The Maritime Rung on the Escalation Ladder: Naval Blockades in a US-China Conflict
Fiona S. Cunningham
7. Primacy and Punishment: US Grand Strategy, Maritime Power, and Military Options to Manage Decline
Evan Braden Montgomery
Biography
Jonathan D. Caverley is Professor of Strategy in the Strategic and Operational Research Department of the Naval War College’s Center for Naval Warfare Studies, Newport, USA. He is the inaugural director of the Bernard Brodie Strategy Group.
Peter Dombrowski is the William B. Ruger Chair of National Security Economics in the Strategic and Operational Research Department. Previous positions include Chair of the Strategic Research Department, Editor of the Naval War College Review, Co-Editor of International Studies Quarterly, and Associate Professor of Political Science at Iowa State University. Dombrowski is the author of over 65 publications. His most recent book is The End of Grand Strategy: U.S. Maritime Operations in the 21st Century (2018).






