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NOLAN, JANNE E (5) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   080830


Bureaucracy of deterrence: To remake U.S. nuclear weapons policy, the next president will need to overcome entrenched interests. How arduous a task will this be? Ask Bill Clinton / Nolan, Janne E; Holmes, James R   Journal Article
Holmes, James R Journal Article
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Publication 2008.
Key Words Nuclear Weapons  Deterrence  Bureaucracy  United States 
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2
ID:   006371


Global engagement: cooperation and security in the 21st century / Nolan, Janne E 1994  Book
Nolan, Janne E Book
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Publication Washington, D C, Brookings Institution, 1994.
Description xvi, 623p.
Standard Number 0815760973
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Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
037294327.17/NOL 037294MainOn ShelfGeneral 
3
ID:   036800


Military industry in Taiwan and South Korea / Nolan, Janne E 1986  Book
Nolan, Janne E Book
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Publication Hampshire, Macmillan Press Ltd, 1986.
Description xi, 205p.
Standard Number 0333373006
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Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
026913338.47623/NOV 026913MainOn ShelfGeneral 
4
ID:   050583


Trappings of power: ballistics missiles in the third world / Nolan, Janne E 1991  Book
Nolan, Janne E Book
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Publication Washington, D.C., Brookings Institution, 1991.
Description x, 209p.
Standard Number 0815760965
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Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
035203358.175091724/NOL 035203MainOn ShelfGeneral 
5
ID:   151765


What comes next / Chayes, Antonia; Nolan, Janne E   Journal Article
Nolan, Janne E Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Wars do not end when the last shot is fired. War planning has failed to demonstrate an understanding that victory requires consolidation and the emergence of a more healthy society. The most prominent recent example is the Second Iraq War, but the failure reaches back to the American Civil War. This essay is less concerned with the moral obligation to reconstruct after war than the practical necessity of jus post bellum. In order to learn how to achieve such a consolidation of military victory, a shift in mindset is required from both civil and military policy-makers and planners. A change in practice is required at the very beginning of planning for war. “Whole of government” has been an empty phrase, but experience dictates that an unprecedented degree of domestic and international cooperation is required.
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