Modern War: What Is It Good For?

Modern War: What Is It Good For?

Virtual Course | Available

Zoom North Miami, FL 33180 United States
use laptop/tablet/phone
anyone
1/28/2025-3/4/2025
11:00 AM-12:30 PM EST on Tue
$90.00
$70.00

Modern War: What Is It Good For?

Virtual Course | Available

We are delighted to be able to continue our collaboration with OSHER ONLINE, an educational service that is offered by our "big sister" the Osher National Resource Center (NRC) at Northwestern University. This class is being run and organized by NRC staff. Sessions are live and will not be recorded. 


Vietnam, viewed by many as a turning point between old and new approaches to war, raised many questions about the role of superpowers, asymmetrical resources, and counterinsurgencies on the world stage. In this course, we will look at the wars in Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan, Ukraine, and Gaza. All of these wars are asymmetrical, but what else do they have in common, and how are they informed by Vietnam? We will discuss how superpowers are central players in these conflicts by way of their supplies and support. In this course, we will examine human ways of evaluating the politics and strategies, particularly what happens when three vectors cannot agree: the public, politicians, and the military.



Your instructor: Jeff Rice, MSc


Jeff Rice received an undergraduate degree from Northwestern University then pursued graduate work in African Studies at the University of Edinburgh. He completed a dissertation entitled "Wealth Power and Corruption: A Study of Asante Political Culture." He returned to Northwestern to teach history and political science and became a Weinberg College academic adviser. He is currently an Emeritus Senior Lecturer in political science, specifically West African history, US history of the 60's, Marx & Weber, African politics, military strategy, the politics of famine, and student protest and free speech.





  • Members save $20. 
    Please note that this class will be run and organized by the National Resource Center in Chicago and NOT by OLLI at FIU.
    You are going to receive your log in information directly from the NRC staff.