Academic literature on the topic 'Hill Warfare'

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Journal articles on the topic "Hill Warfare"

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Caldwell, David H. "J. M. Hill, Celtic warfare, 1595–1763." Northern Scotland 7 (First Series, no. 1 (January 1986): 166–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/nor.1986.0033.

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Wilkinson, Matthew. "Negotiating with the Other: Centre-Periphery Perceptions, Peacemaking Policies and Pervasive Conflict in the Chittagong Hill Tracts, Bangladesh." International Review of Social Research 5, no. 3 (October 1, 2015): 179–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/irsr-2015-0017.

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Abstract Intrastate peace agreements tend to be drafted in situations of political chaos, multiple combatants and shifting allegiances within and between state and non-state actors. Despite this, such agreements continue to reflect a bilateral understanding of conflict, with the state on one side and the non-state on the other. Such an understanding was employed in the largely unsuccessful 1997 Chittagong Hill Tracts Peace Accord in Bangladesh. This article argues that the failure of the Accord to secure a durable and lasting peace is due to the mistaken belief by the Bangladeshi government that the conflict was a ‘two sides’ war between the modern Bengali-Muslim state and it’s ‘primitive’ and ‘savage’ periphery. Soon after the Peace Accord was signed it became apparent that the Government of Bangladesh had made a fatal error in assuming that the communities in question were a simple, homogenous and unified group. Rather, the communities of the CHT are a collection of ethnically and ideologically distinct groups. This failure has led to division and competition of local politics in the CHT today, and continued warfare within and between many CHT communities. Violent actors have been polarized by the terms of the peace agreement and jungle warfare continues at great risk and cost to communities.1
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BHINDER, N. "BRITISH IMPACT UPON PROFESSIONAL TRAINING OF BORDER GUARDS IN THE REPUBLIC OF INDIA." ТHE SOURCES OF PEDAGOGICAL SKILLS, no. 20 (November 22, 2017): 42–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.33989/2075-146x.2017.20.209625.

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The article is devoted to the analysis of British impact upon the system of professional training of border guards in the Republic of India. The aim of the article is to investigate the British role in the system of training of border guards in the Republic of India and to point out the efficiency of some methods and forms for modern system of training. The article proves that there are a wide range of similar threats for border security systems in the Republic of India and Ukraine and therefore the author persuades that it is necessary to compare the systems of training of servicemen of border agencies of the Republic of India and the State Border Guard Service of Ukraine and to outline recommendations for creative implementations of some principles and approaches.On the basis of analysis of literature the author admits that the necessity to select the training of border guards within the system of military training due to specific functions of border guards was done in the British Indian Army and special forces were established. Also the article proves that the training was divided into three phases: basic individual training, progressive or group training and integrated training. The border guards were supposed to obtain the following skills: marksmanship, vigilance, mountain warfare, hill warfare, piqueting, map reading, intelligence, scouting, technical competence, physical endurance, etc. To train border guards there were established permanent training camps along the North-West frontier, some mountain warfare schools, and later higher educational establishments where special disciplines on border warfare were taught. The article describes the methods and forms of training of border guards. They are the following: training in real conditions, war games, project method, practical exercises, combined lectures, conferences, “sandbox” exercise, and illustrative methods. The author emphasizes that a range of official documents concerning training of border guards were issued: Operation Memorandums, Field Manual for border guards, Guidelines for border warfare, etc.
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Van Horn, Carl E. "Fear and Loathing on Capitol Hill: The 99th Congress and Economic Policy." PS: Political Science & Politics 19, no. 01 (1986): 23–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1049096500017108.

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The first session of the 99th Congress was a year of wrenching institutional and political realignment. Facing monstrous structural budget deficits in excess of $200 billion a year. Congress struggled to adjust its distributive urges to the unpleasant realities of a redistributive era. Unlike previous budget crises that were caused by economic events beyond Congress's control, the current problem was created by an unwillingness to raise sufficient revenues to pay for the nation's defense and social program commitments. Frustration, gridlock, and partisan warfare eventually ended in surrender to the Executive Branch: a balanced-budget act was adopted that could radically alter Congress's power of the purse.During the 99th Congress, many Democratic members also continued to realign their policy positions in accordance with contemporary economic and political forces. Democrats in Congress searched for an appealing formula that would ensure political survival and continued control of the House. But the strain of reconciling their traditional public philosophy with conservative trends left Democrats demoralized and in disarray.
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Van Horn, Carl E. "Fear and Loathing on Capitol Hill: The 99th Congress and Economic Policy." PS 19, no. 1 (1986): 23–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0030826900625316.

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The first session of the 99th Congress was a year of wrenching institutional and political realignment. Facing monstrous structural budget deficits in excess of $200 billion a year. Congress struggled to adjust its distributive urges to the unpleasant realities of a redistributive era. Unlike previous budget crises that were caused by economic events beyond Congress's control, the current problem was created by an unwillingness to raise sufficient revenues to pay for the nation's defense and social program commitments. Frustration, gridlock, and partisan warfare eventually ended in surrender to the Executive Branch: a balanced-budget act was adopted that could radically alter Congress's power of the purse.During the 99th Congress, many Democratic members also continued to realign their policy positions in accordance with contemporary economic and political forces. Democrats in Congress searched for an appealing formula that would ensure political survival and continued control of the House. But the strain of reconciling their traditional public philosophy with conservative trends left Democrats demoralized and in disarray.
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Tino, Richard. "Marketing warfare by Al Ries and Jack Trout McGraw-Hill Book Company 216 pp., $17.95." Journal of Direct Marketing 1, no. 3 (1987): 62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/dir.4000010311.

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FURGOL, E. J. "Celtic Warfare 1595-1763 James Michael Hill. Pp. 203 + 24 maps. Edinburgh, John Donald, 1986 £12.50." Innes Review 40, no. 1 (June 1989): 85–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/inr.1989.40.1.85.

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Sheehan, Anthony J. "Celtic warfare, 1595–1763. By James Michael Hill. Pp xi, 203. Edinburgh: John Donald. 1986. £12.50." Irish Historical Studies 27, no. 105 (May 1990): 92–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0021121400010452.

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Pathak, Bishnu. "Impacts of India’s Transit Warfare against Nepal." World Journal of Social Science Research 2, no. 2 (November 11, 2015): 266. http://dx.doi.org/10.22158/wjssr.v2n2p266.

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<p><em>Nepal promulgated the New Constitution with signatures of 90 percent of the Constituent Assembly (CA) II members on September 20, 2015</em><em>.</em><em> The world congratulated Nepal for its success, but Nepal’s roji-roti-beti closest neighbor India sent a cold-note and a mild-warning. India informally conveyed a proposed 7-point constitutional amendment the following day supporting 10 percent of Nepal’s CA II, which are agitating Madhesi groups. Such amendments interfere with landlocked Nepal’s sovereign and internal affairs, but Nepal was full of confusion in answering it. Moreover, India initiated an undeclared transit trade warfare, blocking Nepo-India borders. The blocking at borders is freezing the life of all Nepalis. Now Nepal suffers from an acute shortage of cooking and oxygen gas, gasoline, medicines and other daily humanitarian supplies. Hospitals have stopped normal operations in the lack of medicines and oxygen gas. No gasoline is being provided to public and private vehicles except security officials. Only emergency flights are operating. Worse still, India’s transit warfare was conducted in a period when Nepo-China borders were blocked by the post-Earthquake. India’s proposed Amendment in the Constitution for Madhesi groups is just a drama; clearly the myopic interest of India is to control Nepal’s natural resources and to restore the Hindu Kingdom. Ranjit Rae, India’s Ambassador to Kathmandu gathering agitating Tarai-Madhes leaders into the Embassy just before Prime Minister</em><em>’</em><em>s election said, “The winning of Oli as a Prime Minister of Nepal is a defeat of India”</em><em> </em><em>(Ratopati</em><em>,</em><em> 2015). Rae further hurts the Nepali as he followed Goebbels’ style of reporting to New Delhi. As a result, angry masses are displaying arson effigies of India and PM Modi across the country ranging in Tarai, Hill and Mountain. The 21st century’s great socialist leader Modi now becomes known as a bully leader in the eyes of Nepali and South Asian people. And his popularity is plummeting each and every day. If the talented and clever Modi does not abandon his ego and ambition, he might do suicide in the same way Nepal’s former King Mahendra did in 1972 when he honestly realized the error of his past mistakes and wrongdoings. Nepal now turns to United Nations against India’s shadow-boxing to achieve landlocked country’s sovereign rights and other concerned rights.</em></p>
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YOUNG, JOHN R. "Celtic Warfare, 1595–1763. By James Michael Hill. Pp. xi, 203. Edinburgh: John Donald. Reprint 1995. £13.95." Scottish Historical Review 75, no. 2 (October 1996): 255–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/shr.1996.75.2.255.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Hill Warfare"

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Rable, Kyle K. ""One to the Head, Two to the Heart": The Failure of Psychological Warfare Doctrine and Understanding in The Vietnam War." Bowling Green State University / OhioLINK, 2021. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=bgsu1616336908093754.

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ABBIATI, MICHELE. "L'ESERCITO ITALIANO E LA CONQUISTA DELLA CATALOGNA (1808-1811).UNO STUDIO DI MILITARY EFFECTIVENESS NELL'EUROPA NAPOLEONICA." Doctoral thesis, Università degli Studi di Milano, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/2434/491761.

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L’esercito italiano e la conquista della Catalogna (1808-1811) Uno studio di Military Effectiveness nell’Europa napoleonica Settori scientifico-disciplinari SPS/03 – M-STO/02 La ricerca ha lo scopo di ricostruire e valutare l’effettività militare dell’esercito italiano al servizio di Napoleone I. In primo luogo attraverso un’analisi statistica e strategica della costruzione, e del successivo impiego, dell’istituzione militare del Regno d’Italia durante gli anni della sua esistenza (1805-14); successivamente, è stato scelto un caso di studi particolarmente significativo, come la campagna di Catalogna (1808-11, nel contesto della guerra di Indipendenza spagnola), per poter valutare il contributo operazionale e tattico dei corpi inviati dal governo di Milano e la loro integrazione con l’apparato militare complessivo del Primo Impero. La tesi ha voluto rispondere alla mancanza di studi sul comportamento in guerra dell’esercito italiano e, allo stesso tempo, introdurre nella storiografia militare italiana la metodologia di studi, d’origine anglosassone e ormai di tradizione trentennale, di Military Effectiveness. La ricerca si è primariamente basata, oltre che sulla copiosa memorialistica a stampa italiana e francese, sulla documentazione d’archivio della Secrétairerie d’état impériale (Archives Nationales di Pierrefitte-sur-Seine, Parigi), del Ministère de la Guerre francese (Service historique de la Défence, di Vincennes, Parigi) e del Ministero della Guerra del Regno d’Italia (Archivio di Stato di Milano). Dal punto di vista dei risultati è stato possibile verificare come l’esercito italiano abbia rappresentato, per Bonaparte, uno strumento duttile e di facile impiego, pur in un contesto di sostanziale marginalità numerica complessiva di fronte alle altre (e cospicue) forze messe in campo da parte dell’Impero e dei suoi altri Stati satellite e alleati. Per quanto riguarda la campagna di conquista della Catalogna è stato invece possibile appurare il fondamentale contributo dato dal contingente italiano, sotto i punti di vista operazionale e tattico, per la buona riuscita dell’invasione; questo primariamente grazie alle elevate caratteristiche generali mostrate dallo stesso, ma anche per peculiarità disciplinari e organizzative che resero i corpi italiani adatti a operazioni particolarmente aggressive.
The Italian Army and the Conquest of Catalonia (1808-1811) A Study of Military Effectiveness in Napoleonic Europe Academic Fields and Disciplines SPS/03 – M-STO/02 The research has the purpose of reconstruct and evaluate the military effectiveness of the Italian Army existed under the reign of Napoleon I. Firstly through a statistic and strategic analysis of the development, and the following deployment, of the military institution of the Kingdom of Italy in the years of its existence (1805-14). Afterwards, a particularly significant case study was chosen, as the campaign of Catalonia (1808-11, in the context of the Peninsular War), in order to assess the operational and tactical contribution of the regiments sent by the Government of Milan and their integration in the overall military apparatus of the First Empire. The thesis wanted to respond to the lack of studies on the Italian army’s behavior in war and, at the same time, to introduce the methodology of the Military Effectiveness Studies (of British and American origin and, by now, enriched by a thirty-year old tradition) in the Italian historiography. The research is primarily based, besides the numerous memoirs of the Italian and French veterans, on the archive documentation of the Secrétairerie d’état impériale (Archives Nationales of Pierrefitte-sur-Seine, Paris), of the French Ministère de la Guerre (Service historique de la Défence, of Vincennes, Paris) and of the Italian Ministero della Guerra (Archivio di Stato di Milano). About the results, it has been verified how the Italian army has become a flexible and suitable instrument for Bonaparte, albeit in a context of substantial overall numerical marginality in comparison to the heterogeneous forces available to the Empire and its others satellites and allied states. Regarding the campaign of Catalonia, instead, it was possible to ascertain the fundamental contribution of the Italian regiments, in an operational and tactical perspective, for the success of the invasion. This was primarily due to the excellent general characteristics shown by the expeditionary force, but also to disciplinary and organizational peculiarities that have made the Italian corps suitable for particularly aggressive operations.
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Books on the topic "Hill Warfare"

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Kohlman, Oley. Up hill with the ski troops. Walden, Colo: O. Kohlman, 1985.

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1921-, Mauldin Bill, and Palen Ann, eds. Up hill with the ski troops. Walden, Colo: O. Kohlman, 1995.

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Hill 909: The story of John D. Magrath. San Francisco, California: [Henry Keenan], 2009.

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1932-, Schwartz Gerald, ed. A woman doctor's Civil War: Esther Hill Hawks' diary. Columbia, S.C: University of South Carolina Press, 1989.

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Lt. Col. George A. Larson USAF (Ret.) and USAF (Ret ). Hill Air Force Base. Arcadia Publishing, 2021.

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Beneath Hill 60. Random House (Au), 2010.

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Edwards, John Newman. Noted Guerrillas, Or, The Warfare Of The Border - Being A History Of The Lives And Adventures Of Quantrell, Bill Anderson, George Todd, Dave Poole, ... Maupin, Tuck And Woot Hill, Wm. Gregg, Tho. Merz Press, 2010.

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John N. (John Newman) 1839- Edwards. Noted Guerrillas, or, the Warfare of the Border: Being a History of the Lives and Adventures of Quantrell, Bill Anderson, George Todd, Dave Poole, Fletcher Taylor, Peyton Long, Oll Shepherd, Arch Clements, John Maupin, Tuck and Woot Hill, Wm. Gregg, ... Creative Media Partners, LLC, 2022.

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John N. (John Newman) 1839- Edwards. Noted Guerrillas, or, the Warfare of the Border: Being a History of the Lives and Adventures of Quantrell, Bill Anderson, George Todd, Dave Poole, Fletcher Taylor, Peyton Long, Oll Shepherd, Arch Clements, John Maupin, Tuck and Woot Hill, Wm. Gregg, ... Creative Media Partners, LLC, 2022.

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Auerbach, Jeffrey A. Imperial Boredom. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198827375.001.0001.

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Imperial Boredom offers a radical reconsideration of the British Empire during its heyday in the nineteenth century. Challenging the long-established view that the empire was about adventure and excitement, with heroic men and intrepid women settling new lands and spreading commerce and civilization around the globe, this analysis instead argues that boredom was central to the experience of empire. It looks at what it was actually like to sail to Australia, to serve as a soldier in South Africa, or to accompany a colonial official to the hill stations of India, arguing that for numerous men and women, from governors to convicts, explorers to tourists, the Victorian empire was dull and disappointing. Drawing on diaries, letters, memoirs, and travelogues, it demonstrates that all across the empire, men and women found the landscapes monotonous, the physical and psychological distance from home debilitating, the routines of everyday life wearisome, and their work unfulfilling. Ocean voyages were tedious; colonial rule was bureaucratic; warfare was infrequent; economic opportunity was limited; and indigenous people were largely invisible. The seventeenth-century empire may have been about wonder and marvel, but the Victorian empire was a far less exciting project. Combining individual stories of pain and perseverance with broader analysis, this book traces the emergence of boredom as a human emotion, while simultaneously explaining what these expressions of boredom reveal about the British Empire.
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Book chapters on the topic "Hill Warfare"

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Moreman, T. R. "The Punjab Irregular Force and the Origins of Hill Warfare, 1849–78." In The Army in India and the Development of Frontier Warfare, 1849–1947, 1–34. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230374621_1.

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Blustain, Jonah S. "There’s Uranium in Them Hills: The Archaeology of Nevada’s Uranium Boom." In Military Geosciences and Desert Warfare, 107–21. New York, NY: Springer New York, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4939-3429-4_8.

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Saunders, Nicholas J. "Concealment, Raiding, and Ambush." In Desert Insurgency, 184–214. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198722007.003.0009.

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This chapter looks at the Tooth Hill campsites, which were a grail of modern conflict archaeology, as they preserved the faintest traces of military activity in a vast and hostile desert, and others probably lay undiscovered in-between Tel Shahm and Mudawwara. They are the rare imprint of the origins of modern mobile guerrilla warfare which shaped so many military actions across the twentieth century, and into the present. However, guerrilla warfare against the Hejaz Railway achieved arguably its most spectacular success not against a station but in what would later be regarded as a classic ambush. The Hallat Ammar ambush was about metal—trains, track, mines, and munitions—and so metal-detector survey was invaluable. No identifiable trace of the looting of the train was found, though the large quantity of railway debris had doubtless been sifted, robbed, and moved around in the intervening years. Indeed, despite its isolation, the archaeology of the ambush site could not be the pristine remains of the Arab Revolt, but rather, as elsewhere, a layering of the intervening century’s activities, disturbing, overlaying, and obscuring some of the events of the attack.
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Nurhussein, Nadia. "Martial Ethiopianism in Verse." In Black Land, 144–68. Princeton University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691190969.003.0007.

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This chapter addresses the explosion of verse dealing with the “Ethiopian Crisis,” or the Second Italo-Abyssinian War, such as J. Harvey L. Baxter's “Sonnets for the Ethiopians” and Melvin Tolson's “The Bard of Addis Ababa.” Returning to traditional tropes of nineteenth-century Ethiopianism even in the face of modern warfare, Baxter calls upon the nation's resources of antiquity to produce a counteroffensive against the ancient Roman Empire that Mussolini looked upon with such nostalgia. It also discusses the occasional verse by lesser lights and unknown bards such as Rufus Gibson and Jay N. Hill and by important figures such as Marcus Garvey. The tenor of Garvey's elegies written in honor of fallen Ethiopian war heroes Ras Nasibu of Ogaden and Ras Desta presents a fascinating contrast to his expressed disdain for Haile Selassie. The chapter also talks about the global importance of the agitprop role of the New Times and Ethiopia News.
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Bardgett, Richard. "Soil and the Future." In Earth Matters. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199668564.003.0012.

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If the importance of soil for human lives hasn’t leapt out of the previous pages, this book has failed in its goal. Soil touches so many aspects of human life, often in ways of which we are not even aware. There are the obvious, such as when we dig up the soil to grow vegetables and flowers, or when a farmer takes a plough to a field. But there are also the less obvious, such as the role of soil in dampening climate change, filtering the water we drink, and breaking down and recycling the billions of tonnes of dead plant remains that annually fall to the ground. Soils have also played their role in warfare, thwarting military advances and providing underground shelter to those under attack. I could go on, but I think the message is clear: earth matters. Looking to the future, a major challenge for humans will be how to deal with rapid soil change. I emphasized at the start of this book that the natural rate of soil formation is spectacularly slow; it takes literally thousands of years for a mature soil to develop. But within just a few years, or decades, humans can completely transform the structure, chemistry, and biology of soils, often leading to their degradation. This degradation of soil can be catastrophic, for example when soils are over-cultivated or overgrazed, or when unstable hill slopes are deforested and left exposed to the erosive forces of wind and rain. Or it can be progressive, such as that caused by climate warming which, in some places, such as the Arctic, is gradually speeding up organic-matter decay and carbon dioxide release from soils. It can also be abrupt, such as when land is sealed by asphalt and concrete during the construction of expanding cities, or during war when major offensives obliterate the fabric of soil. As I stressed earlier in this book, the causes of soil degradation are complex: population growth, poverty, poor delivery of information to farmers, conflict, shortage of land, and climate change all play a role.
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Gentles, Ian. "The Conquest and Rule of Scotland, 1650–59." In The New Model Army, 205–36. Yale University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.12987/yale/9780300226836.003.0012.

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This chapter assesses how the Scots grew more and more disenchanted by what they heard of the religious and social radicalism within the army. It examines the implication of Charles I's execution, and how it precipitated a counter-revolutionary realignment of forces in Scotland. A majority of Covenanters—the ‘Kirk party’—joined with Engagers to resist the New Model. The chapter also recounts Cromwell's preparations for the invasion which involved propaganda and logistical support. It demonstrates Cromwell's skill in planting doubts in sincere minds, and weaning many Scots from their attachment to Charles II. The chapter highlights that logistical support was the key to offsetting Cromwell's inferior numbers during their twelve-month campaign. The chapter chronicles Cromwell's preliminary engagements with Musselburgh, the Pentland Hills, and the Battle of Dunbar. It investigates how Cromwell renewed his theological offensive, then looks at how the combination of military action, ideological warfare, and espionage reduced the Kirk party and its army to ruins.
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Conference papers on the topic "Hill Warfare"

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Naqvi, Messam Abbas, Hassan Raza Shah, Ahsen Ali, and Fausz Naeem. "Design and development of a small scale fixed wing aerial vehicle for over the hill missions in urban warfare." In 2014 11th International Bhurban Conference on Applied Sciences and Technology (IBCAST). IEEE, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ibcast.2014.6778155.

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