Notes:
[1] Risa Brooks, “The Paradoxes of Huntingtonian Professionalism,” in Reconsidering American Civil-Military Relations. Military Society, Politics and Modern War, ed. Lionel Beehner, Risa Brooks, and Daniel Maurer (Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2020), 1; Risa Brooks; Paradoxes of Professionalism: Rethinking Civil-Military Relations in the United States. International Security 2020; 44 (4): 7–44. doi: https://doi.org/10.1162/isec_a_00374.
[2] Brooks, “The Paradoxes of Huntingtonian Professionalism,” 2.
[3] Brooks, “The Paradoxes of Huntingtonian Professionalism,” 3.
[4] Peter B. White, “Militarized Ministries of Defence? Placing the Military Experience of Secretaries of Defense in Comparative Context,” in ed. Lionel Beehner, Risa Brooks, and Daniel Maurer (Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2020), 129.
[5] Lionel Beehner and Daniel Maurer, “Introduction,” in Reconsidering American Civil-Military Relations. Military Society, Politics and Modern War, ed. by Lionel Beehner, Risa Brooks, and Daniel Maurer (Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2020), 3.
[6] Jessica D. Blankshain, “Who has ‘skin in the game’? The Implications of an Operational Reserve for Civil-Military Relations,” in Reconsidering American Civil-Military Relations. Military Society, Politics and Modern War, ed. Lionel Beehner, Risa Brooks and Daniel Maurer (Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2020), 101.
[7] Michael A. Robinson, Lindsay P. Cohn, and Max Z. Margulies, “Dissent and Sensibility: Conflicting Loyalties, Democracy, and Civil-Military Relations,” in Reconsidering American Civil-Military Relations. Military Society, Politics and Modern War, ed. Lionel Beehner, Risa Brooks and Daniel Maurer (Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2020), 63.
[8] Brooks, “The Paradoxes of Huntingtonian Professionalism,” 2.
[9] Robinson, Cohn, and Margulies, “Dissent and Sensibility,” 63-64.
[10] Vincenzo Bove, Mauricio Rivera, and Chiara Ruffa, “Terrorist Violence and Nonviolent Military Involvement in Politics,” European Journal of International Relations 26, No. 1 (202): 263-288; Chiara Ruffa, “Militarization in established democracies? The case of France,” in Security Threats, Militarization and Democratic Control of the Military, ed. Yagil Levy and David Kühn (New York, NY: Lynne Rienner, 2021), 139-160.
[11] Beehner and Maurer, “Introduction,” 4.
[12] Beehner and Maurer, “Introduction,” 10.
[13] Beehner and Maurer, “Introduction,” 11.
[14] Brooks, “The Paradoxes of Huntingtonian Professionalism,” 17-40.









