Donald Alexander Downs
Arms and the University
Donald Alexander Downs
Arms and the University
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Demonstrates how some military presence on campus can contribute to the diversity of ideas and the education of all students.
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Demonstrates how some military presence on campus can contribute to the diversity of ideas and the education of all students.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 456
- Erscheinungstermin: 17. Mai 2012
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 27mm
- Gewicht: 771g
- ISBN-13: 9780521156707
- ISBN-10: 052115670X
- Artikelnr.: 34541397
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 456
- Erscheinungstermin: 17. Mai 2012
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 27mm
- Gewicht: 771g
- ISBN-13: 9780521156707
- ISBN-10: 052115670X
- Artikelnr.: 34541397
Donald Alexander Downs is Meiklejohn Professor of Political Science, Law, and Journalism at the University of Wisconsin, Madison. He is the author of five books: Nazis in Skokie: Freedom, Community, and the First Amendment; The New Politics of Pornography; More than Victims: Battered Women, the Syndrome Society, and the Law; Cornell '69: Liberalism and the Crisis of the American University; and Restoring Free Speech and Liberty on Campus. He is the co-founder and director of the Wisconsin Center for the Study of Liberal Democracy at the University of Wisconsin and a frequent contributor to local, state, national and international media.
Part I. A Normative and Pedagogical Framework: 1. The closing of the
university mind: the military/university gap and the problem of civic and
liberal education; 2. Education in the regime: how a military presence can
enhance civic and liberal education; Part II. ROTC and the University: 3.
ROTC and the university: an introduction; 4. ROTC and the Ivies: before the
storm; 5. ROTC and the Ivies: the divorce; 6. ROTC, Columbia, and the Ivy
League: Sisyphus renews his quest to renew a troubled relationship; 7.
Post-DADT: Sisyphus nears the top of the mountain; 8. Pedagogy and military
presence: the educational influence of student-soldiers in their own words;
9. Winning hearts and minds?: The consequences of military presence for
non-military students; Part III. Military History Examined: 10. Military
history: an endangered or protected species?; 11. Half empty or half full?:
Military historians' perspectives on the status of military history and the
leading departments; 12. Military presence in security studies: political
realism (re)considered; 13. Security studies in the wake of the Cold War
university: paragons of productive fiction, or throwing the baby out with
the bathwater?; Part IV. Concluding Thoughts: 14. Conclusion: placing the
military in the university.
university mind: the military/university gap and the problem of civic and
liberal education; 2. Education in the regime: how a military presence can
enhance civic and liberal education; Part II. ROTC and the University: 3.
ROTC and the university: an introduction; 4. ROTC and the Ivies: before the
storm; 5. ROTC and the Ivies: the divorce; 6. ROTC, Columbia, and the Ivy
League: Sisyphus renews his quest to renew a troubled relationship; 7.
Post-DADT: Sisyphus nears the top of the mountain; 8. Pedagogy and military
presence: the educational influence of student-soldiers in their own words;
9. Winning hearts and minds?: The consequences of military presence for
non-military students; Part III. Military History Examined: 10. Military
history: an endangered or protected species?; 11. Half empty or half full?:
Military historians' perspectives on the status of military history and the
leading departments; 12. Military presence in security studies: political
realism (re)considered; 13. Security studies in the wake of the Cold War
university: paragons of productive fiction, or throwing the baby out with
the bathwater?; Part IV. Concluding Thoughts: 14. Conclusion: placing the
military in the university.
Part I. A Normative and Pedagogical Framework: 1. The closing of the
university mind: the military/university gap and the problem of civic and
liberal education; 2. Education in the regime: how a military presence can
enhance civic and liberal education; Part II. ROTC and the University: 3.
ROTC and the university: an introduction; 4. ROTC and the Ivies: before the
storm; 5. ROTC and the Ivies: the divorce; 6. ROTC, Columbia, and the Ivy
League: Sisyphus renews his quest to renew a troubled relationship; 7.
Post-DADT: Sisyphus nears the top of the mountain; 8. Pedagogy and military
presence: the educational influence of student-soldiers in their own words;
9. Winning hearts and minds?: The consequences of military presence for
non-military students; Part III. Military History Examined: 10. Military
history: an endangered or protected species?; 11. Half empty or half full?:
Military historians' perspectives on the status of military history and the
leading departments; 12. Military presence in security studies: political
realism (re)considered; 13. Security studies in the wake of the Cold War
university: paragons of productive fiction, or throwing the baby out with
the bathwater?; Part IV. Concluding Thoughts: 14. Conclusion: placing the
military in the university.
university mind: the military/university gap and the problem of civic and
liberal education; 2. Education in the regime: how a military presence can
enhance civic and liberal education; Part II. ROTC and the University: 3.
ROTC and the university: an introduction; 4. ROTC and the Ivies: before the
storm; 5. ROTC and the Ivies: the divorce; 6. ROTC, Columbia, and the Ivy
League: Sisyphus renews his quest to renew a troubled relationship; 7.
Post-DADT: Sisyphus nears the top of the mountain; 8. Pedagogy and military
presence: the educational influence of student-soldiers in their own words;
9. Winning hearts and minds?: The consequences of military presence for
non-military students; Part III. Military History Examined: 10. Military
history: an endangered or protected species?; 11. Half empty or half full?:
Military historians' perspectives on the status of military history and the
leading departments; 12. Military presence in security studies: political
realism (re)considered; 13. Security studies in the wake of the Cold War
university: paragons of productive fiction, or throwing the baby out with
the bathwater?; Part IV. Concluding Thoughts: 14. Conclusion: placing the
military in the university.