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 2020-02-01 to 2024-02-01.)
ArticleCitations
Cyber campaigns and strategic outcomes29
Publicly attributing cyber attacks: a framework27
Delegating strategic decision-making to machines: Dr. Strangelove Redux?18
Russian nuclear strategy and conventional inferiority13
Multilateralism as a tool: Exploring French military cooperation in the Sahel12
Loyalty, hedging, or exit: How weaker alliance partners respond to the rise of new threats12
Revisiting plausible deniability12
Eastbound and down: The United States, NATO enlargement, and suppressing the Soviet and Western European alternatives, 1990–199210
France’s interventions in Mali and the Sahel: A historical institutionalist perspective9
The sixth RMA wave: Disruption in Military Affairs?9
Defence innovation and the 4thindustrial revolution in Russia9
Artificial intelligence in China’s revolution in military affairs9
Politics by many other means: The comparative strategic advantages of operational domains9
Mutually assured surveillance at risk: Anti-satellite weapons and cold war arms control8
A new and better quiet option? Strategies of subversion and cyber conflict8
Pulled East. The rise of China, Europe and French security policy in the Asia-Pacific8
French military operations in Africa: Reluctant multilateralism7
‘Catalytic nuclear war’ in the age of artificial intelligence & autonomy: Emerging military technology and escalation risk between nuclear-armed states7
What is a military innovation and why it matters7
The forever-emerging norm of banning nuclear weapons7
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
Are they reading Schelling in Beijing? The dimensions, drivers, and risks of nuclear-conventional entanglement in China6
Deterrence by denial in cyberspace6
A conceptual framework of defence innovation5
France’s military operations in Africa: Between institutional pragmatism and agnosticism5
Understanding battlefield coalitions5
From closed to open systems: How the US military services pursue innovation5
A tale of three French interventions: Intervention entrepreneurs and institutional intervention choices5
The art of net assessment and uncovering foreign military innovations: Learning from Andrew W. Marshall’s legacy5
A legitimate sphere of influence: Understanding France’s turn to multilateralism in Africa5
‘Nothing but humiliation for Russia’: Moscow and NATO’s eastern enlargement, 1993-19955
Small states and autonomous systems - the Scandinavian case4
The rise of the autocratic nuclear marketplace4
An uncertain journey to the promised land: The Baltic states’ road to NATO membership4
Seizing the commanding heights: the PLA Strategic Support Force in Chinese military power4
Military-technological innovation in small states: The cases of Israel and Singapore4
The defense innovation machine: Why the U.S. will remain on the cutting edge3
Montesquieu: Strategist ahead of his time3
Signalling capacity and crisis diplomacy: Explaining the failure of ‘maximum pressure’ in the 2017 U.S.-North Korea nuclear crisis3
Iranian proxies in the Syrian conflict: Tehran’s ‘forward-defence’ in action3
The strategic and realist perspectives: An ambiguous relationship3
Military adaptation and organisational convergence in war: Insurgents and international forces in Afghanistan3
Organizational strategy and its implications for strategic studies: A review essay3
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
NATO’s inherent dilemma: strategic imperatives vs. value foundations3
Technology is awesome, but so what?! Exploring the relevance of technologically inspired awe to the construction of military theories3
Why rebels rely on terrorists: The persistence of the Taliban-al-Qaeda battlefield coalition in Afghanistan3
0.023819923400879