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Risk Taking and Decisionmaking: Foreign Military Intervention Decisions [Paperback]

Yaacov Y. I. Vertzberger (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Book Description

December 1997
Risks are an integral part of complex, high-stakes decisions, and decisionmakers are faced with the unavoidable tasks of assessing risks and forming risk preferences. This is true for all decision domains, including financial, environmental, and foreign policy domains, among others. How well decisionmakers deal with risk affects, to a considerable extent, the quality of their decisions. This book provides the most comprehensive analysis available of the elements that influence risk judgments and preferences.

The book has two dimensions: theoretical and comparative-historical. The study of risk-taking behavior has been dominated by the rational choice approach. Instead, the author adopts a socio-cognitive approach involving: a multivariate theory integrating contextual, cognitive, motivational, and personality factors that affect an individual decisionmaker’s judgment and preferences; the social interaction and structural effects of the decisionmaking group and its organizational setting; and the role of cultural-societal values and norms that sanction or discourage risk taking behavior.

The book’s theoretical approach is applied and tested in five historical case studies of foreign military interventions. The richly detailed empirical data on the case studies make them, metaphorically speaking, an ideal laboratory for applying a process-tracing approach in studying judgment and decision processes at varying risk levels. The case studies analyzed are: U.S. interventions in Grenada in 1983 and Panama in 1989 (both low risk); Soviet intervention in Czechoslovakia in 1968 (moderate risk): U.S. intervention in Vietnam in 1964-68 (high risk); and Israel’s intervention in Lebanon in 1982-83 (high risk).

--This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Editorial Reviews

Review

“This brilliant book brings together a wide range of materials from various fields on the dynamics of risk taking and of foreign military interventions. These subjects have been explored before, but never to my knowledge with such thoroughness or creativity. This is a definitive volume that will long withstand the test of time.”—James N. Rosenau, George Washington University
--This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

From the Inside Flap

Risks are an integral part of complex, high-stakes decisions, and decisionmakers are faced with the unavoidable tasks of assessing risks and forming risk preferences. This is true for all decision domains, including financial, environmental, and foreign policy domains, among others. How well decisionmakers deal with risk affects, to a considerable extent, the quality of their decisions. This book provides the most comprehensive analysis available of the elements that influence risk judgments and preferences.
The book has two dimensions: theoretical and comparative-historical. The study of risk-taking behavior has been dominated by the rational choice approach. Instead, the author adopts a socio-cognitive approach involving: a multivariate theory integrating contextual, cognitive, motivational, and personality factors that affect an individual decisionmaker’s judgment and preferences; the social interaction and structural effects of the decisionmaking group and its organizational setting; and the role of cultural-societal values and norms that sanction or discourage risk taking behavior.
The book’s theoretical approach is applied and tested in five historical case studies of foreign military interventions. The richly detailed empirical data on the case studies make them, metaphorically speaking, an ideal laboratory for applying a process-tracing approach in studying judgment and decision processes at varying risk levels. The case studies analyzed are: U.S. interventions in Grenada in 1983 and Panama in 1989 (both low risk); Soviet intervention in Czechoslovakia in 1968 (moderate risk): U.S. intervention in Vietnam in 1964-68 (high risk); and Israel’s intervention in Lebanon in 1982-83 (high risk).
--This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 658 pages
  • Publisher: Stanford University Press (December 1997)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0804731683
  • ISBN-13: 978-0804731683
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.2 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.7 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,122,352 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant Analysis - Hope many in Washington have read it, July 13, 2003
By 
Michael F. Murphy (Toronto, ON Canada) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
I don't always use superlatives and am not given to handing out five star recommendations liberally, as some reviewers are, but this gem of insight, prose and scholarship deserves both.

Although this book is ostensibly about the risks of foreign intervention (more about that in a minute) this book is actually two books in one. The first part, which runs 168 lucid, pithy pages, provides one of the most concise and cogent descriptions of risk management that I have seen anywhere. The first two chapters are pure theory; the latter two apply the theory to foreign intervention decisions in general. Vertzberger breaks with the prevailing dogma in risk management (rational choice theory) and instead pursuasively advances an alternative approach - the socio-cognitive model. Good for him - having been in the operational risk management business for a decade, I think his view holds a lot of sway. The author manages to pack so much information into this part that it could easily stand on its own - all of it written in crisp fluid prose, and masterfully referenced, indexed and endnoted, with a very thorough bibliography.

The second part of the book (which runs another 200 pages) applies the theory in Part One to five case studies (Grenada, Panama and Czechoslovakia - all deemed low to moderate risk)and Vietnam and Lebanon (both deemed to be high risk)

This is capped off and tied together by conclusions and implications that address the military, economic and political consequences, especially as they play out over time (usually for the worse).

Vertzberger drills deep and wide into many rich veins of understanding and his material is extremely relevent to the world situation today. It was a delight to read in 1998 when this book was first published, and just as much a delight, albeit hauntingly so, when I pulled it out, post Iraq-II, and wondered how many of Vertzberger's wise cautions had been considered by those responsible for the now current adventure there.

If I have one regret about this book, it is not writing this review back in 1998 when I first read the book. Who knows if that would have made any difference, but if reading this book, or writing this review, could save even one life, it would be worth it. If you are a risk manager, a foreign service officer, a military official, active in the political sphere or just a concerned citizen, you ignore this book at the peril, not just of the reader, but in the case of foreign military interventions, of many.

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5.0 out of 5 stars AMAZING - In-depth postmortem of the Iraq War - Written a decade ago!, April 26, 2007
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This review is from: Risk Taking and Decisionmaking: Foreign Military Intervention Decisions (Paperback)
First, know that this is NOT a political book. It's a piece of academic research that explores, in depth, the sociocognitive process of situation awareness, risk assessment, decision making, and learning/adjustment. This general process is generic and ubiquitous--essentially the same for businesses, emergency responders, the press, even doctors in addition to this domain of international relations in dealing with complex, changing, often critical situations. Doubtful? Read this along with Jerome Groopman's book How Doctors Think--it addresses the same basic challenges and behaviors only in a different domain (even leveraging some of the same sources, like the classic Judgment Under Uncertainty: Heuristics and Biases by Kahneman, Slovic, & Tversky). It describes, merely from a different perspective, the same cognitive blinders/bounded awareness also written about by Max Bazerman of Harvard Business School.

This book forensically investigates five international case studies: US interventions in Grenada (1981), Panama (1989), and Vietnam (1964-68); Soviet intervention in Czechoslovakia (1968); and Israel's intervention in Lebanon (1982-83).

What is shocking is that most of the book ends up also being an amazingly detailed postmortem description of the run up to the decision to intervene in Iraq and the decisions and actions that have followed so far.

This book is densely written--it's not popular press. Not something you'd take to the "rose room" for quick-read snippets. But it clearly illuminates issues that are CRITICAL today: habits of ignorance, bias, and hubris, and patterns of inattention, misperception, cognitive error, unwise actions & missed opportunities, and unintended consequences that have repeated in history, are repeating in Iraq, and will repeat in the future if not consciously avoided. It deserves a yellow highlighter and concerted critical thinking. I consider it REQUIRED READING for all citizens and media as well as congress, the DoD, and this administration.

This is not on the best-seller list, but it SHOULD be. If you only read one book this year, this should be it. It provides a template for understanding today's situation and guidance for learning how to deal with analogous circumstances in the future.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Although the concept of risk and its behavioral implications have been singled out for extensive social scientific research in a broad range of fields-including medicine, economics, industry, technology, and environmental studies-it has largely gone unnoticed in the field of international politics and specifically in the study of international security issues, where risk is perennial and its consequences are visible and critical. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
foreign military intervention decisions, protracted intervention, policy entrapment, decisionmaking group, nonstructural variables, loose bipolar system, reputational interests, risk disposition, foreign policy decisionmakers, incentives for intervention, normative legitimacy, sociocognitive approach, decisionmaking system, cognitive legitimacy, risk acceptant, policy persistence, failing policy, risk acceptability, intervening power, risk dimensions, horizontal escalation, key decisionmakers, domestic legitimacy, decisions involving risk, dissonant information
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
United States, Soviet Union, North Vietnam, South Vietnam, Third World, Washington Post, Rolling Thunder, Warsaw Pact, Central Committee, Security Council, United Nations, Prague Spring, President Bush, Cold War, Department of Defense, Lyndon Johnson, Middle East, President Reagan, Southeast Asia, Labor Party, President Johnson, East Germany, Second World War, Great Society, State Department
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