Books by "Charles F. Doran"

4 books found

History of Ramsey County and the City of St. Paul

History of Ramsey County and the City of St. Paul

by George E. Warner, Charles M. Foote

1881

Strategic Cousins

Strategic Cousins

by John Charles Blaxland

2006 · McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP

Australia and Canada may have different security strategies, reflecting contrasting domestic circumstances, but John Blaxland shows that common interests have led their forces to work together for over a century.Strategic Cousinsexamines the role of the professional armed forces of these geographically distant nations through a comparison of their historical experiences with expeditionary land forces.Blaxland traces the shift from ties with the British Empire, which led Canadian and Australian forces to fight in the Boer War, the two World Wars, and Korea, to their contribution alongside the United States in Afghanistan. Using late twentieth-century concepts of policy, military strategy, operations, and tactics, he reveals that Canada and Australia have had remarkably comparable experiences while supporting their key allies. Although the two nations have at times chosen divergent courses, their paths since the end of the Cold War have largely converged - and closer collaboration could increase their influence and effectiveness and benefit their allies.

The Golden Shaft

The Golden Shaft

by Charles Gibbon

1883

Great Powers and World Order

Great Powers and World Order

by Charles W. Kegley, Gregory A. Raymond

2020 · CQ Press

Great Powers and World Order encourages critical thinking about the nature of world order by presenting the historical information and theoretical concepts needed to make projections about the global future. Charles W. Kegley and Gregory Raymond ask students to compare retrospective cases and formulate their own hypotheses about not only the causes of war, but also the consequences of peace settlements. Historical case studies open a window to see what strategies for constructing world order were tried before, why one course of action was chosen over another, and how things turned out. By moving back and forth in each case study between history and theory, rather than treating them as separate topics, the authors hope to situate the assumptions, causal claims, and policy prescriptions of different schools of thought within the temporal domains in which they took root, giving the reader a better sense of why policy makers embraced a particular view of world order instead of an alternative vision.