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PUBLICATIONS AND PAPERS

Books

Andrew M. Johnston, Hegemony and Culture in the Origins of NATO Nuclear Strategy, 1945-1954 (New York: Palgrave-Macmillan Press, 2005), 340 pp.

 

Chapters in books

Andrew M. Johnston, “'Despite wars, scholars remain the great workers of the international': American Sociologists and French sociology during the First World War," The Academic World in the Era of the Great War (ed. by Marie-Eve Chagnon and Tomas Irish [Palgrave-Macmillan, 2018]).

 

Andrew M. Johnston, “Emily Greene Balch,” entry in Opposition to War: An Encyclopedia of United States Peace and Antiwar Movements, Mitchell K. Hall, editor, Scott H. Bennett, Justus D. Doenecke, and Valarie H. Ziegler, contributing editors (ABC-Clio, 2018).

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Andrew M. Johnston, “Julia Grace Wales,” entry in Opposition to War: An Encyclopedia of United States Peace and Antiwar Movements (ABC-Clio, 2018).


Andrew M. Johnston, “Eisenhower as NATO commander,” Chester Pach, ed., A Companion to Dwight D. Eisenhower (Wiley-Blackwell Publishing, 2017), 73-92.

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Andrew M. Johnston, “The Neoconservatives and Theodore Roosevelt,” in Serge Ricard and Claire Delahaye, eds., L'héritage de Théodore Roosevelt : impérialisme et progressisme, 1912-2012 (Paris: L’Harmattan, 2012): 155-174.

 

Andrew M. Johnston, “Mead, Addams, Balch: Feminism, Pragmatism, and the Vicissitudes of Liberal Internationalism,” in Claire Delahaye and Serge Ricard (dir.), La Grande Guerre et le combat féministe. (Paris: L'Harmattan, 2009): 93-126.

 

Andrew M. Johnston, “Sex and Gender on Roosevelt’s America,” in Serge Ricard, ed., A Companion to Theodore Roosevelt (Wiley-Blackwell Publishing, 2011): 112-134.

 

Andrew M. Johnston, “’A Functioning Organism With its Own Voice’: the Temporary Council Committee and the Strategic Origins of an Atlantic Community, 1951-1952,” in Valérie Aubourg, Gérard Bossuat and Giles Scott-Smith, eds., Communauté européene, communauté atlantique? (Paris: Soleb, 2008): 342-365.

 

PEER-REVIEWED Articles 

Andrew M. Johnston, “Jeanne Halbwachs, international feminist pacifism, and France’s Société d’Études Documentaires et Critiques sur la Guerre,” Peace and Change 41, 1 (January 2016): 17-31.

 

Andrew M. Johnston, “The disappearance of Emily G. Balch, social scientist,” Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era 13, 2 (April 2014): 166-199.

 

Andrew M. Johnston, “’Disembodied Military Planning’: the Construction of the Medium Term Defense Plan and the Diplomacy of NATO Conventional Strategy, 1948-1950.” Diplomacy and Statecraft, 12, 2 (2001): 185-230.

 

Andrew M. Johnston, “Massive Retaliation and the Specter of Salvation: Religious Imagery, Nationalism and Dulles’s Nuclear Strategy, 1952-1954.” Journal of Millennial Studies 2, 2 (2000): 1-18.

 

Andrew M. Johnston, “Mr. Slessor Goes to Washington: the Influence of the British Global Strategy Paper on the Eisenhower New Look,” Diplomatic History, 22, 3 (1998): 361-398.

 

Andrew M. Johnston, “Does America Have a Strategic Culture?” Review essay, Journal of Conflict Studies 18, 2 (1998).   

 

other articles

Andrew M. Johnston, “The Historiography of American Intervention in the First World War,” Passport: The Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations Review, 45, 1 (April 2014): 22-29.

 

Andrew M. Johnston, “Arts and Letters at Kingsmere: the Jenkins and McCurry Families,” Up the Gatineau! (Journal of the Gatineau Valley Historical Association), 39 (2013): 1-20. (Awarded the Arthur Davison Prize for Outstanding Contribution to Up the Gatineau! In April 2014).

 

Andrew M. Johnston, “Regal Heights, Kingsmere,” Up the Gatineau! (Journal of the Gatineau Valley Historical Association), 39 (2013): 21-26.

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Andrew M. Johnston, “‘There Must be Two Americas’: Obama’s AfPak War and the Pathologies of Global Disorder,” in “‘We Are Going to Stay Long Enough to Set up Their Own Institutions’: Obama and the ‘AfPak’ Question,” roundtable forum with Scott Lucas, Artemy Kalinovsky, Giles Scott-Smith, and Marilyn Young, NeoAmericanist 4, 2 (summer 2009)

 

Andrew M. Johnston, “An Interview with Hans Joas,” NeoAmericanist. 3, 1 (spring/summer 2007)

 

BOOK REVIEWS

Andrew M. Johnston, Review of Tony Smith’s Why Wilson matters? The origin of American liberal internationalism and its crisis today (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2017) in Passport: The Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations Review (forthcoming, April 2018)

 

Andrew M. Johnston, Review of Andrew Johnstone, Against immediate evil: American internationalists and the four freedoms on the eve of World War II (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2014) in The Canadian Journal of History 51, 3 (2016): 637–639.

 

Andrew M. Johnston, H-Diplo Roundtable Review of Shane J. Maddock, Nuclear Apartheid: The Quest for American Atomic Supremacy from World War II to the Present (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2010), Spring 2011.

 

Andrew M. Johnston, Review of Robert J. Jackson and Philip Towle, Temptations of Power: the United States in Global Politics After 9/11 (New York: Palgrave, 2007), in The International History Review, 31, 1 (March 2009): 213-215.

 

Andrew M. Johnston, Review of Kurk Dorsey’s Bernath Lecture, “Dealing With the Dinosaur (and its Swamp): Outing the Environment in Diplomatic History,” Diplomatic History, 29, 4 (September 2005), 573-87, posted on H-Diplo, January 2007.

 

Andrew M. Johnston, Review of Elisabeth Glaser and Hermann Wellenweuther, eds., Bridging the Atlantic: the Question of American Exceptionalism in Perspective (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002), in Canadian Journal of History (April 2005): 178-180.

 

Andrew M. Johnston, Review of Andrew Bacevich, American Empire: The Realities and Consequences of U.S. Diplomacy (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2002), Canadian Journal of History (April 2004): 189-191.

 

Andrew M. Johnston, Review of Oliver J. Daddow, Britain and Europe Since 1945: Historiographical Perspectives on Integration (Manchester University Press, 2004), in Rethinking History 8 (December 2004): 569-573.

 

Andrew M. Johnston, Review of James Jay Carafano, “Mobilizing Europe’s Stateless: America’s Plan for a Cold War Army,” Journal of Cold War Studies (Fall 1999), posted on H-Diplo, the list-server for Diplomatic and International History, December 1999.

 

Andrew M. Johnston, Review of Lawrence Wittner, The Struggle Against the Bomb, Volume One: One World or None. A History of the World Nuclear Disarmament Movement Through 1953 (1993), Canadian Journal of History, 29 (April 1994): 253-55.

 

Andrew M. Johnston, Review of Eugene Rostow, Toward Managed Peace: The National Security Interests of the United States, 1759 to the Present (1993), and Melvyn Leffler, A Preponderance of Power: National Security, the Truman Administration and the Cold War (1992), in Intelligence and National Security, 9, 4 (October 1994): 793-97.

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RECENT CONFERENCE PAPERS

Andrew M. Johnston, “Building Internationalist Norms in the 1920s: The Summer Schools of the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom,” for a panel entitled Liberal Internationalism as Practice: Conflicting Norms and Moralities in Constructing a New International Order in the 1920s, Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations Annual Meeting, June 18-20, 2020, New Orleans, LA, USA. (This conference was canceled because of COVID-19)

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Andrew M. Johnston, “Zurich 1919: war, peace, and the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom’s feminist critique of international relations,” The People’s Conference: The Transnational Legacies of 1919. La conférence des peuples: les héritages transnationaux de 1919, Royal Military College of Canada, Kingston (Ontario), November 7-8, 2019  

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Andrew M. Johnston, “The Women’s International League for Peace And Freedom’s Feminist Critique of the League of Nations, 1919-1924,” A Century of Internationalisms: the Promise and Legacies of the League of Nations, September 18-20, 2019, Lisbon, Portugal.

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Andrew M. Johnston, “Human rights, the Great War, and the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom’s critique of nationalism,” Visions of Humanity: Culture and International History VI, John- F.-Kennedy-Institut für Nordamerikastudien, Freie Universität Berlin, Berlin, 6-8 May 2019

 

Andrew M. Johnston, “Apathy, passive resistance and cynicism: Randolph Bourne’s sociology of the liberal state,” Canadian Association of American Studies conference, Fredericton, New Brunswick, October 21-23, 2016. 

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Andrew M. Johnston, “Double Consciousness and Civil Rights: how to watch The Butler,” Movies with Meaning Gala, ASW/First United Churches, Ottawa, October 22, 2014. 

 

Andrew M. Johnston, “Jeanne Halbwachs and the Société d’Études documentaires et critiques sur la guerre,” World War I: Dissent, Activism, and Transformation, Georgian Court University, Lakewood, New Jersey, October 17-18, 2014. 

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Andrew M. Johnston, discussant on panel, “Thematic Border History,” Borders in Globalization Conference, Carleton University, Ottawa, September 25-27, 2014. 

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Andrew M. Johnston, “American Sociologists and International Sociology during the First World War,” The Academic World in the Era of the Great War, Dublin, Ireland, August 14-16, 2014.

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Andrew M. Johnston, “Henri Bergson and the Ontology of Diplomacy,” for a panel entitled Ideas in Transit: Intellectual Exchanges as Foreign Relations at the Turn to the Twentieth Century, at the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations Annual Meeting, Lexington, Kentucky, 20 June 2014.

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Andrew M. Johnston, “The Theory and Practice of Gender in International History: what transnational feminists have taught me,” at The Berkshire Conference on the History of Women, University of Toronto, Toronto, May 25, 2014.

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