Description
Advocates of military transformation sometimes liken competing militaries to competing business firms. They hope that lessons from business will reinforce their message that even the world's strongest military can be usurped by weaker ones, if the latter capitalize on disruptive technologies or concepts of fighting while the former remains satisfied with incremental improvements. Yet little work has been done to tie such thinking back to the businesses that deliver goods and services to the military. Buying Military Transformation does just that. The book is a must-read for those interested in the future of the U.S. military and the defense industry. -- Cindy Williams, principal research scientist of the Security Studies Program, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Dombrowski and Gholz show the irony in the much heralded transformation of the American military. Innovation in military doctrine and technology, the extensive use of unmanned aerial vehicles, and advanced communication networks requires for its implementation not the destruction of the military's traditional industrial suppliers, as one might expect, but their interested cooperation and support. Significant transformation, they explain, depends upon the managerial and political skills of the makers of the very weapon system platforms that transformation will replace. -- Harvey Sapolsky, professor of public policy and organization, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Despite being a highly critical element of military transformation, the defense-industrial component has been underanalyzed by scholars. Peter Dombrowski and Eugene Gholz have made an important contribution to our understanding. -- Pierre Chao, Senior Fellow and Director of Defense-Industrial Initiatives, Center for Strategic and International Studies
About the Author
Peter Dombrowski is professor and chair of the Strategic Research Department at the Naval War College in Rhode Island. He is the author of more than thirty journal articles, monographs, book chapters, and governmental reports in the fields of international relations, international political economy, and national security.Eugene Gholz is an assistant professor at the University of Texas in Austin. He is an expert on the aerospace and defense industries and studies innovation, business-government relations, defense management, and US foreign military policy. Peter Dombrowski is an Associate Professor in the Strategic Research Department at U.S. Naval War College. He has published more than twenty-five articles and chapters on national security strategy, international political economy, and international relations, and one academic press book, Policy Responses to the Globalization of American Banking. He is an editor of International Studies Quarterly and director of the Strategic Research Department's Economics and International Security Project. Eugene Gholz is an Assistant Professor at the Patterson School of Diplomacy and International Commerce at the University of Kentucky. He is also a Research Associate of the MIT Security Studies Program and of the Strategic Research Department of the Naval War College, and he is a team member of the Council of Foreign Relations.
Reviews
An intriguing addition to the literature on military innovation. -- Lawrence D. Freedman Foreign Affairs "The book offers key lessons for the theory of the Revolution in Military Affairs." -- Andrew Brooks Survival
Book Information
ISBN 9780231135702
Author Peter Dombrowski
Format Hardback
Page Count 224
Imprint Columbia University Press
Publisher Columbia University Press