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  1. The Soviet Strategic Culture: Implications for Limited Nuclear Operations. Author. Jack L. Snyder. Subject. This report identifies several historical, institutional, and political factors that have given rise to a uniquely Soviet approach to strategic thought.

    • 2MB
    • Jack L Snyder
    • 48
    • 1977
  2. The phrase 'strategic culture' was first used by Snyder in a paper published in 1977. The key paragraph stated: 1. It is useful to look at the Soviet approach to strategic thinking as a unique 'strategic culture'. Individuals are socialized into a distinctively Soviet mode of strategic thinking.

    • Ken Booth
    • 1990
  3. Sep 5, 2020 · Strategic culture as a concept is generally understood as pertaining to the influence of the cultural dimension in national strategy. The concept rose to prominence due to the inability of the structural realist theory to explain differences in behavioural patterns among nations.

    • V Anand
    • 2020
  4. Jan 31, 2022 · Jack Snyder defined strategic culture as “the body of attitudes and beliefs that guides and circumscribes thought on strategic questions, influences the way strategic issues are formulated, and sets the vocabulary and perceptual parameters of strategic debate” (Snyder 1977, 8).

  5. scholarship, in 1977 Jack Snyder introduced the concept of “strategic culture” into the realm of modern security studies. Snyder argued that Soviet strategic culture provided the context for understanding the intellectual, institutional, and strategic-cultural de-terminants of the actions of the Soviet state.

  6. Jack Lewis Snyder (born February 6, 1951) is an American political scientist who is the Robert and Renée Belfer Professor of International Relations at Columbia University, specializing in theories of international relations. Snyder's research centers around the relationship between violence and government.

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