Journal of Strategic Studies

Papers
(The TQCC of Journal of Strategic Studies is 2. The table below lists those papers that are above that threshold based on CrossRef citation counts [max. 250 papers]. The publications cover those that have been published in the past four years, i.e., from 2021-04-01 to 2025-04-01.)
ArticleCitations
Towards control and effectiveness: The Ministry of Defence and civil-military relations in India17
The Economic Weapon: The Rise of Sanctions as a Tool of Modern War17
The fulcrum of democratic civilian control: Re-imagining the role of defence ministries15
The spoilers from within: Allies and export controls13
Deterrence by denial in cyberspace12
The Ministry of National Defence in South Korea: Military dominance despite civilian supremacy?12
Artificial intelligence in China’s revolution in military affairs11
A Swiss “Columbus” in Clausewitz’s homeland: How the works of Antoine-Henri de Jomini were received by the Prussian military before 18489
From the editors9
Fortuna , chance, risk and opportunity in strategy from Antiquity to the Nuclear Age8
The myth of the nuclear revolution: Power politics in the atomic age7
Nuclear divergence between Britain and the United States: SDI and the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty7
Pulled East. The rise of China, Europe and French security policy in the Asia-Pacific6
Tomorrow, the World: The Birth of U.S. Global Supremacy6
Undermining economic engagement and enlargement: The Kremlin’s impact on US foreign economic policy in Ukraine (1993–2001)6
Hidden hands: The failure of population-centric counterinsurgency in Afghanistan 2008-116
We’ll never have a model of an AI major-general: Artificial Intelligence, command decisions, and kitsch visions of war6
The strategic-level effects of long-range strike weapons: A framework for analysis6
Who, exactly, will ban the bomb?6
Is the decline of war a delusion? The long peace phenomenon and the modernization peace – the explanation that refutes or subsumes all others6
The war against Ukraine through the prism of Russian military thought6
Explaining the 2003 Iraq war (again) - Gore-war vs. Gore-peace revisited5
What is a military innovation and why it matters4
Here there be dragons? Chinese submarine options in the Arctic4
“No annihilation without representation”: NATO nuclear use decision-making during the Cold War4
Deterrence asymmetry and strategic stability in Europe4
Learning from losing: How defeat shapes coalition dynamics in wartime4
The digital cult of the offensive and the US military4
When the coalition determines the mission: NATO’s detour in Libya4
Speaking with one voice: Coalitions and wartime diplomacy4
Anticipatory governance and new weapons of war: Lessons from the Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons4
Grand strategy or grant strategy? Philanthropic foundations, strategic studies and the American academy3
Stability and change in nuclear thinking: Grand strategy, nuclear weapons, and policy change3
The Neptune Factor: Alfred Thayer Mahan and the concept of sea power3
A new and better quiet option? Strategies of subversion and cyber conflict3
Will inter-state war take place in cities?3
How small states break oil sanctions: Israel’s oil import strategy in the 1970s2
Introduction2
Strategic studies and cyber warfare2
The difficult politics of peace: Rivalry in modern South AsiaReview of Christopher Clary, The difficult politics of peace: Rivalry in modern South Asia , New York, Oxfor2
Looking back to look forward: Autonomous systems, military revolutions, and the importance of cost2
On command2
Imagining total onslaught: South African military threat scenarios and doctrinal change, 1953–19752
From the editors2
Routes to reform: Civil–military relations and democracy in the third wave Routes to reform: Civil–military relations and democracy in the third wave , by David Kuehn an2
How the Russian army changed its concept of war, 1993–20222
Going nuclear: The development of American strategic conceptions about cyber conflict2
Andrew Marshall and net assessment2
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