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Chiara Libiseller, "Reconceptualizing War: The Rise and Fall of Fashionable Concepts in Strategic Studies" (Oxford UP, 2026)

May 12, 2026
Chiara Libiseller, Lecturer in strategic studies at King’s College London and author of Reconceptualizing War, examines how concepts in strategic studies rise like fashions and then fade. She traces revolution in military affairs, counterinsurgency, and hybrid warfare. Short, sharp takes explore why concepts become dominant, how practitioners propel and abandon them, and what that means for research and reflexivity.
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INSIGHT

Hybrid Warfare Sparked The Research Question

  • Chiara Libiseller noticed hybrid warfare's sudden popularity in 2014–15 and questioned its analytical value despite widespread adoption in courses and policy.
  • Her PhD grew from that skepticism into a comparative study of why certain strategic concepts repeatedly become fashionable.
INSIGHT

Practitioner Influence Drives Concept Fashions

  • Strategic studies is especially affected by fashions because of tight practitioner–academic ties and policy-driven research agendas.
  • When defense actors institutionalize a concept, academics follow, reducing time for deep theorizing and narrowing accumulated knowledge.
INSIGHT

Fashion Life Cycle Explains Concept Dynamics

  • Libiseller compares three fashionable concepts — RMA, counterinsurgency, and hybrid warfare — using a fashion life-cycle framework borrowed from management studies.
  • Fashionability refers to diffusion, vagueness, authority, and alignment of behavior, not the original concept's existence.
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