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Newport Paper Manuscripts
Newport Papers are considered on a variety of subjects but are ideally related to
the contemporary operational or strategic concerns in the realm of maritime security.
They are distributed in print to a select subscription list (some 1,600 names),
and extra copies can be made available to authors for additional distribution. In
addition, they are published electronically (in Acrobat) at full length on the Press
website.
Extended treatment is necessary; the Newport Papers are published as book-length
monographs, not pamphlets. For a combination of production and financial reasons,
the Papers normally range from a minimum of 100 proof pages (not typescript pages--this
equates to approximately 41,000 words) to about 150. Greater length can sometimes
be accommodated.
Full scholarly apparatus is required. To avoid the necessity of extensive revisions,
please consult our house style. While close conformance with our citation style
would not be required in manuscript, the elements of information it requires by
it should be present.
Art (that is, photographs, tables, figures, diagrams) can generally be accommodated,
through in black and white only (print version). Tables and figures are generally
redrawn locally, for approval; high-resolution (at least 300 dpi) files of photographs,
etc., must be submitted.
If interested in publishing a Newport Paper (whether the manuscript is prospective,
in progress, or complete), please submit a proposal to the editor, via managing
editor, comprising:
- An abstract, laying out the purpose, thesis, general approach, nature of sources
and evidence
- Projected length
- Biographical note or cv
- Features with production or cost implications (extensive art, appendices, etc.).
Questions, special cases? Please get in touch with the editorial office.
Downloadable pdf's of Newport Papers #1, 4, 10, 14, and all thereafter are also
available, on a test basis, on our new Naval War College Press Online Portal. Please let us know
if you find this portal useful.
Note: You may see a warning, "There is a problem with this website's security certificate."
Simply click "Continue to this website." It is perfectly safe--the portal's security
certificate is valid.
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32
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Major Naval Operations, by Milan Vego (2008)
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31
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Perspectives on Maritime Strategy: Essays from the Americas, edited by Paul D. Taylor
(2008)
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30
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U.S. Naval Strategy in the 1970s: Selected Documents, edited by John Hattendorf
(2007)
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29
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Shaping the Security Environment, edited by Derek S. Reveron (2007)
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28
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Bruce A. Elleman, Waves of Hope: The U.S. Navy's Response to the Tsunami in Northern
Indonesia (2007)
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27
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U.S. Naval Strategy in the 1990s: Selected Documents, edited by John Hattendorf
(2006)
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26
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Carnes Lord, ed., Reposturing the Force: U.S. Overseas Presence in the Twenty-first
Century (2006)
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25
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The Regulation of International Coercion: Legal Authorities and Political Constraints,
by James P. Terry (2005)
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24
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Naval Power in the Twenty-first Century: A Naval War College Review Reader, edited
by Peter Dombrowski (2005)
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23
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The Atlantic Crises: Britain, Europe and Parting from the United States, by William
Hopkinson (2005)
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22
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China's Nuclear Force Modernization, edited by Lyle J. Goldstein, with Andrew S.
Erickson (2005)
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21
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Latin American Security Challenges: A Collaborative Inquiry from North and South,
edited by Paul D. Taylor (2004
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20
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Global War Game: Second Series, 19841988, by Robert H. Gile (2004).
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19
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The Evolution of the U.S. Navy's Maritime Strategy, 19771986, by John Hattendorf
(2004
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18
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Transformation and the Defense Industry after Next: The Defense Industrial Implications
of Network-Centric Warfare, by Peter J. Dombrowski, Eugene Gholz, and Andrew L.
Ross (2003).
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17
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The Limits of Transformation: Officer Attitudes toward the Revolution in Military
Affairs, by Thomas G. Mahnken and James R. FitzSimonds (2003).
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16
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The Third Battle: Innovation in the U.S. Navy's Silent Cold War Struggle with Soviet
Submarines, by Owen R. Cote, Jr. (2003).
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15
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International Law and Naval War: The Effect of Marine Safety and Pollution Conventions
during International Armed Conflict, by Sonja Ann Jozef Boelaert-Suominen (2000)
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14
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Theater Ballistic Missile Defense from the Sea: Issues for the Maritime Component
Commander, by Charles C. Swicker (1998)
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13
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Sailing New Seas, by J. Paul Reason, with David G. Freymann (1998)
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12
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What Color Helmet? Reforming Security Council Peacekeeping Mandates, by Myron H.
Nordquist (1997)
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11
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The International Legal Ramifications of United States Counter-Proliferation Strategy:
Problems and Prospects, by Frank Gibson Goldman (1997)
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10
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Chaos Theory: The Essentials for Military Applications, by Glenn R. James (1996)
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9
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A Doctrine Reader: The Navies of the United States, Great Britain, France, Italy,
and Spain, by James J. Tritten and Luigi Donolo (1995)
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8
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Physics and Metaphysics of Deterrence: The British Approach, by Myron A. Greenberg
(1994)
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7
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Mission in the East: The Building of an Army in a Democracy in the New German States,
by Mark E. Victorson (1994)
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6
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The Burden of Trafalgar: Decisive Battle and Naval Strategic Expectations on the
Eve of the First World War, by Jan S. Breemer (1993)
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5
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Beyond Mahan: A Proposal for a U.S. Naval Strategy in the Twenty-First Century,
by Gary W. Anderson (1993)
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4
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Global War Game: The First Five Years, by Bud Hay and Bob Gile (1993)
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3
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The “New” Law of the Sea and the Law of Armed Conflict at Sea, by Horace B. Robertson,
Jr. (1992)
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2
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Toward a Pax Universalis: A Historical Critique of the National Military Strategy
for the 1990s, by Gary W. Anderson (1992)
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1
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“Are We Beasts?” Churchill and the Moral Question of World War II “Area Bombing,”
by Christopher C. Harmon (1991)
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