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Cold War Laboratory Martin J. Collins

Cold War Laboratory By Martin J. Collins

Cold War Laboratory by Martin J. Collins


Summary

In 1946, before the start of the Cold War with the Soviet Union, the Army Air Forces established Project RAND - a groundbreaking 'think tank' designed to link leaders in the military and aircraft industry. This book examines the critical years of this experiment and investigates in-depth the scientific and social birth of systems analysis.

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Cold War Laboratory Summary

Cold War Laboratory: RAND, the Air Force and the American State 1945-1950 by Martin J. Collins

In 1946, before the start of the Cold War with the Soviet Union, the Army Air Forces established Project RAND - a groundbreaking 'think tank' designed to link leaders in the military and aircraft industry. The new organization was a response to fears that long-range bombers, guided missiles, and atomic bombs inaugurated a new era of danger. Modern war was now total war, a contest between entire societies, and demanded the commitment of peacetime preparation. Science and technology were crucial for such preparation, and RAND offered the Air Force a conduit to the expertise of industry and universities. As an institutional crossroads, RAND became a unique place to experiment with methods and ideas to prepare a pluralistic, democratic society for total war. Martin J. Collins examines the critical years of this experiment through an evolving cast of key individuals: Hap Arnold and MIT professor Edward L. Bowles; Rowan Gaither, president of the RAND board of trustees; Frank Collbohm and Lawrence Henderson, director and associate director of RAND; and mathematician Edwin Paxson, the leader of RAND's first system analysis - a RAND invention that sought to make a science of the study of war. Collins presents an in-depth examination of the birth of systems analysis and how it combined science, politics, and postwar concerns. In developing systems analysis, RAND drew on a spectrum of science and engineering disciplines, and from the fields of economics, political science, and sociology. Its research symbolized the new and far-reaching effects of our response to the Cold War.

About Martin J. Collins

Martin J. Collins has written and edited many books, including Space Race: The U.S.-U.S.S.R. Competition to Reach the Moon. He is a curator in the Space History Division at the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1 Introduction Chapter 2 1. A Long-Haired Air Force?: Henry Arnold, Edward Bowles, and Planning for Science and Technology Chapter 3 2. Two Assignments Inextricably Related: The RAND Contract and Adapting the Military for Science and Technology Chapter 4 3. Bowles and the Corporate Ideal: The Associationalist Vision Seen and Lost Chapter 5 4. Reshaping RAND: Air Warfare as a Domain of Research Chapter 6 5. The Strategic Bombing System Analysis: Science and the Cold War State Chapter 7 Conclusion

Additional information

CIN1588340864G
9781588340863
1588340864
Cold War Laboratory: RAND, the Air Force and the American State 1945-1950 by Martin J. Collins
Used - Good
Hardback
Smithsonian Books
20021117
278
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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