Since the end of the Cold War, the world remains a dangerous place with new threats: regional conflicts, transnational terrorist networks, rogue states, and weapons of mass destruction (i.e., chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear). The second volume of the Handbook of Defense Economics addresses defense needs, practices, threats, agents, and policies in the modern era of globalization. This new era involves novel technologies, new business practices, and enhanced cross-border flows. Such ever-growing flows mean that military armaments and armies are less equipped to keep out unwanted intruders. This introductory chapter sets the stage for this volume in three ways. First, the chapter identifies how threats have changed since the Cold War. For example, the end of the superpower arms race has brought forth new issues, such as the quelling of local conflicts, the role of economic sanctions, and the challenge of asymmetric warfare. There are also new concerns about military manpower and the role of reservists and civilian contractors during a time when most countries have downsized their forces. Second, the chapter indicates the choice of topics and how these topics differ from those in Volume 1. In particular, we selected chapters on topics not covered in Volume 1 (e.g., civil wars, peacekeeping, trade and peace, and economic sanctions); chapters on past topics where there has been significant advances in knowledge (e.g., conflict, terrorism, arms races, and military manpower); and chapters on topics that reflects the influence of globalization and new threats (e.g., terrorism, trade and peace, and arms industries). Third, the chapter provides a brief overview of each chapter in the volume.
[1]
Nicholas Sambanis,et al.
Breaking the Conflict Trap: Civil War and Development Policy
,
2003
.
[2]
T. Sandler,et al.
The Future of the Defence Firm
,
2003
.
[3]
N. Rashevsky,et al.
Arms And Insecurity: A Mathematical Study Of The Causes And Origins Of War
,
1962
.
[4]
T. Sandler,et al.
The Political Economy of Terrorism: The Economic Impact of Transnational Terrorism
,
2005
.
[5]
Vernon L. Smith,et al.
THE PARADOX OF POWER
,
1991
.
[6]
Todd Sandler,et al.
Civil Wars and Economic Growth: Spatial Dispersion
,
2004
.
[7]
T. Sandler,et al.
The Economics of Conflict
,
2006
.
[8]
M. Intriligator,et al.
Arms races and proliferation
,
1995
.
[9]
C. Gray.
The Sheriff: America's Defense of the New World Order
,
2004
.
[10]
M. Intriligator.
Strategic Considerations in the Richardson Model of Arms Races
,
1975,
Journal of Political Economy.
[11]
F. W. Lanchester,et al.
Aircraft in Warfare: The Dawn of the Fourth Arm
,
1995
.
[12]
J. Murdoch,et al.
Economic Growth, Civil Wars, and Spatial Spillovers
,
2002
.
[13]
L. Summers,et al.
Proceedings of the World Bank annual conference on development economics 1992
,
1993
.