Thanks for Your Service: The Causes and Consequences of Public Confidence in the US Military - BRIDGING THE GAP SERIES - Feaver, Peter D. (Professor of Political Science and Public Policy, Professor of Political Science and Public Policy, Duke University) - Books - Oxford University Press Inc - 9780197681138 - February 15, 2024
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Thanks for Your Service: The Causes and Consequences of Public Confidence in the US Military - BRIDGING THE GAP SERIES

Feaver, Peter D. (Professor of Political Science and Public Policy, Professor of Political Science and Public Policy, Duke University)

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Thanks for Your Service: The Causes and Consequences of Public Confidence in the US Military - BRIDGING THE GAP SERIES

A definitive study on the decades-long run of high public confidence in the military and why it may rest on some shaky foundations. What explains the high levels of public confidence in the US military and does high confidence matter? In Thanks for Your Service, the eminent civil-military relations scholar Peter D. Feaver addresses this question and focuses on what it means for the military.

Proprietary survey data show that confidence is partly based on public beliefs about the military's high competence, adherence to high professional ethics, and a determination to stand apart from the bitter divisions ofpartisan politics. However, as Feaver argues, confidence is also shaped by a partisan gap and by social desirability bias, the idea that some individuals express confidence in the military because they believe that is the socially approved attitude to hold. Not only does Feaver help us understand how and why thepublic has confidence in the military, but he also exposes problems that policymakers need to be aware of.

Specifically, this book traces how confidence in the institution shapes public attitudes on the use of force and may not always reinforce best practices in democratic civil-military relations.


320 pages, 67 b/w figures; 51 tables

Media Books     Paperback Book   (Book with soft cover and glued back)
Released February 15, 2024
ISBN13 9780197681138
Publishers Oxford University Press Inc
Pages 328
Dimensions 235 × 156 × 25 mm   ·   450 g