Author's Articles
The Democratization of Violence in the Greater Middle East
Dr. Carter Malkasian joins us to explore how the "democratization of violence"—driven by the availability of assault rifles and explosives—empowered non-state actors and challenged state authority throughout the Cold War. The conversation also addresses…
AI Policy & Hostage Recovery with the Former Deputy Assistant to the President
Dr. Joshua Geltzer, former Deputy Assistant to the President and Legal Advisor to the National Security Council, shares his extensive experience on two crucial topics: artificial intelligence in national security and the evolving policies surrounding hostage…
Cold War Lessons for Export Controls Against China
We sit down with Dartmouth national security scholars Jennifer Lind and Michael Mastanduno as they compare Cold War export control strategies with modern attempts to limit China's access to sensitive US technologies. They delve into key lessons from the…
When Conventional Wisdom Fails
At a time of disruption, this issue of the "Texas National Security Review" examines how national security scholarship can provide both guidance, and useful warning.
What Is Old Is New Again
In her introduction to Volume 8, Issue 2, our editor-in-chief, Sheena Chestnut Greitens, discusses how patterns of continuity and change interact to shape world politics—and the challenges for strategy and scholarship that emerge as a result.
Evolving Challenges, Enduring Principles
In her first introduction as the new editor in chief of the Texas National Security Review, Sheena Chestnut Greitens considers the importance of getting major questions of national and international security right and highlights the journal's role in…