Font Size: a A A

Why war is not enough: Military defeat, the division of labor, and military professionalization

Posted on:2008-08-03Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:The Ohio State UniversityCandidate:Toronto, Nathan WFull Text:PDF
GTID:1446390005477831Subject:Political science
Abstract/Summary:
Does war make states? If it does, it does not make professional militaries. Scholars have often linked war and state development, but one important process of state development---military professionalization---does not seem to follow the "war makes states" logic. There are two reasons for this. First, states are most likely to begin professionalizing the military in response, not to war or the threat of war, but to dire military defeats, or defeats resulting in the occupation of national territory, abnormally high casualties, and the recognition of military incompetence. The humiliation associated with these dire defeats seems to spur political systems into action. Second, the division of labor tends to concentrate the population in urban centers and increase society's human capital and the level of resources available to the state. Thus, an advanced division of labor enables long-term military professionalization. The division of labor thus seems to be a necessary condition, and dire military defeats a sufficient condition, for thorough military professionalization. To evaluate these propositions, I use original data on military professionalism---compiled in a data set spanning from 1800 to 2005---and case studies of military professionalization in Prussia, France, Turkey, and Egypt. The findings of this study suggest that we should rethink how states develop professional military institutions in response to war.
Keywords/Search Tags:War, Military, States, Division, Labor
Related items