****** - Verified Buyer
4.5
Excellent book illustrating major 20th century American wars' impact on the state, rights and politics. Wars include Spanish-American, WWI, WWII, Korea and Vietnam.The three areas of the wars' influence examined are growth of the national state, democratic/civil rights and elections/political parties. Saldin argues American wars have tended to expand the national state, provide opportunities for disempowered citizens to gain political rights, and create crises that demand addressing, thereby forcing change in political party ideology and elections.The author is a political scientist, and the book engages with that discipline's literature, but is readable by non-specialists. In this regard, Saldin argues that political scientists have not paid enough attention to the influence of wars on domestic American politics.