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  1. Edward Mead Earle (1894 – June 23, 1954) was an American author and university lecturer who specialized in the role of the military in foreign relations. He was a consultant to various departments of the U.S. government, especially during World War II.

  2. Jun 15, 2012 · I n this article, the Tufts University historian David Ekbladh recalls the intellectual and institution-building work of a pre-Cold War professor of international relations, Edward Mead Earle (1894-1954). [1]

  3. Jan 1, 2012 · Edward Mead Earle was a historian, scholar, professor, and international relations expert; he was also a founding father of the field we know as Security Studies.

    • David Ekbladh
    • 2012
  4. This chapter addresses the historian Edward Mead Earle, who is widely credited with sanctifying the concept of “grand strategy.” By making strategy “grand,” Earle broadened its scope from a Clausewitzian basis that had been exclusively military to one that incorporated all of statecraft, indeed, virtually all of politics.

  5. Jul 15, 2016 · Not all academic activity consists in writing, however, and as an organiser, an editor, a speaker and an adviser to military and government, Earle made his mark. Moreover, Makers of Modern Strategy achieved a certain longevity in spite of its flaws.

  6. Edward Mead Earle was a specialist in the role of the military in foreign relations. He served as a university lecturer, author, and consultant to various departments of the U.S. government.

  7. Abstract. The American historian Edward Mead Earle has until recently escaped the attention of historians of war, although his edited volume of 1943, Makers of Modern Strategy: Military Thought from Machiavelli to Hitler, was a seminal work in the field, widely read by military historians.