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OverviewTo understand wars and armed conflicts, we need to understand the inner logic of military institutions and warrior culture. In Making Warriors in a Global Era, Tone Danielsen employs ethnographic methods to analyze and discuss current debates among both military personnel and academics about the rise of the special operations forces and their effects on how armed conflicts are handled and wars are fought. Based on a decade of research and Danielsen's unprecedented access inside a Norwegian Naval Special Operations Commando, Danielsen describes the culture, experiences, and skill sets of a special operations unit and explores the historical and political implications these types of units have on modern warfare and society as a whole. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Tone Danielsen , Anna SimonsPublisher: Lexington Books Imprint: Lexington Books Dimensions: Width: 15.40cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 21.80cm Weight: 0.395kg ISBN: 9781498561839ISBN 10: 1498561837 Pages: 242 Publication Date: 15 May 2020 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsReviewsBy using innovative qualitative methods and gaining unparalleled access to her research subjects, Dr. Danielsen has not only written a landmark study of the Norwegian special operations forces community but one which will also stand as a model for research on other country's SOF. Making Warriors in a Global Era is a critical addition to the emerging literature on qualitative approaches to the study of the military in general and special operations forces in particular.--Christopher Marsh, Joint Special Operations University In an excellent in-depth ethnography Tone Danielsen describes and analyzes a unit of the Norwegian Special Forces. Combining keen anthropological insights and sensitive interpretation of empirical examples, she offers a model analysis of the kind of unit that is increasingly taking center stage today's globalized conflicts.--Eyal Ben-Ari, Kinneret Center for Society, Security and Peace The real value of Making Warriors is that it is an outstanding ethnography, a professional deep-dive into what the Norwegian Naval Special Operations Commando (Marinejegerkommandoen, MJK) is all about. . . . Danielsen's work makes a significant contribution to the scholarly literature on continuity and change within the armed forces, specifically SOF, and thus achieves her primary aim. Written in an engaging and accessible style, with the occasional sprinkle of humour, she provides rich descriptions of the MJKculture and how it functions as a learning organization. . . . Overall, Making Warriors is an excellent book that offers insightful micro-and meso-level analyses, and it is replete with thick descriptions of life within MJK. It will be useful to readers with diverse backgrounds and interests, including military scholars and social scientists, anthropology students, and anyone interested in learning about small-nation Special Operations Forces or how to conduct top-notch ethnography. It is accessible to undergraduate readers and could easily be used as an exemplar text in a course on qualitative methods.Danielsennever brags about her accomplishments or flaunts her unprecedented access for the readers. She doesn't have to.It is implicit as the reader follows along. Making Warriors is better than a tell-all book, it is a richly informative story written by a consummate professional and worth every minute spent reading it.--Res Militaris: European Journal of Military Studies Tone Danielsen accomplishes a remarkable feat in modern anthropology: gaining access to a remote and insular special operations tribe, the Marinejegerkommandoen, or the Norwegian version of the Navy SEALs. Few outsiders gain access, much less their trust. Her keen observations and penetrating insights, gained over more than a decade of field work, shed light on the unit's selection process, forging of identity, and their collective decision making process--the seaman's council. In doing so, Danielsen's work takes its place among the handful of serious, scholarly works in the emerging field of special operations.--James Kiras, Air University Author InformationTone Danielsen is principal researcher at the Norwegian Defense Research Establishment with focus on special operations. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |