Journal of Strategic Studies

Papers
(The TQCC of Journal of Strategic Studies is 3. 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 2020-04-01 to 2024-04-01.)
ArticleCitations
Publicly attributing cyber attacks: a framework29
Delegating strategic decision-making to machines: Dr. Strangelove Redux?19
Loyalty, hedging, or exit: How weaker alliance partners respond to the rise of new threats14
Russian nuclear strategy and conventional inferiority13
A new and better quiet option? Strategies of subversion and cyber conflict11
Defence innovation and the 4thindustrial revolution in Russia11
Politics by many other means: The comparative strategic advantages of operational domains10
Eastbound and down: The United States, NATO enlargement, and suppressing the Soviet and Western European alternatives, 1990–199210
The sixth RMA wave: Disruption in Military Affairs?10
What is a military innovation and why it matters9
Artificial intelligence in China’s revolution in military affairs9
Mutually assured surveillance at risk: Anti-satellite weapons and cold war arms control9
‘Catalytic nuclear war’ in the age of artificial intelligence & autonomy: Emerging military technology and escalation risk between nuclear-armed states8
Pulled East. The rise of China, Europe and French security policy in the Asia-Pacific8
The forever-emerging norm of banning nuclear weapons7
Are they reading Schelling in Beijing? The dimensions, drivers, and risks of nuclear-conventional entanglement in China7
A nuclear education: the origins of NATO’s Nuclear Planning Group7
Visions of the next war or reliving the last one? Early alliance views of war with the Soviet Bloc6
A conceptual framework of defence innovation6
Seizing the commanding heights: the PLA Strategic Support Force in Chinese military power6
From closed to open systems: How the US military services pursue innovation6
Understanding battlefield coalitions6
Deterrence by denial in cyberspace6
The art of net assessment and uncovering foreign military innovations: Learning from Andrew W. Marshall’s legacy5
An uncertain journey to the promised land: The Baltic states’ road to NATO membership5
Small states and autonomous systems - the Scandinavian case5
‘Nothing but humiliation for Russia’: Moscow and NATO’s eastern enlargement, 1993-19955
The defense innovation machine: Why the U.S. will remain on the cutting edge4
Iranian proxies in the Syrian conflict: Tehran’s ‘forward-defence’ in action4
Explaining China’s large-scale land reclamation in the South China Sea: Timing and rationale4
The rise of the autocratic nuclear marketplace4
Military-technological innovation in small states: The cases of Israel and Singapore4
Why rebels rely on terrorists: The persistence of the Taliban-al-Qaeda battlefield coalition in Afghanistan3
4IR technologies in the Israel Defence Forces: blurring traditional boundaries3
Signalling capacity and crisis diplomacy: Explaining the failure of ‘maximum pressure’ in the 2017 U.S.-North Korea nuclear crisis3
The shift to defence in Israel’s hybrid military strategy3
The strategic and realist perspectives: An ambiguous relationship3
Military adaptation and organisational convergence in war: Insurgents and international forces in Afghanistan3
NATO’s inherent dilemma: strategic imperatives vs. value foundations3
Helping or hurting? The impact of foreign fighters on militant group behavior3
China’s military strategy for a ‘new era’: Some change, more continuity, and tantalizing hints3
‘The special service squadron of the Royal Marines’: The Royal Navy and organic amphibious warfare capability before 19143
Trust but verify: Satellite reconnaissance, secrecy and arms control during the Cold War3
Organizational strategy and its implications for strategic studies: A review essay3
Technology is awesome, but so what?! Exploring the relevance of technologically inspired awe to the construction of military theories3
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