Book series: Terrorism: Commentary on Security Documents (Oxford University Press)

Terrorism: Commentary on Security Documents is a series that provides primary source documents and expert commentary on various topics relating to the worldwide effort to combat terrorism, as well as efforts by the United States and other nations to protect their national security interests. Source: Oxford University Press website .

The Law Library has just received the latest two volumes in this series, vol. 145,  The North Korean Threat and vol. 146, Russia’s Resurgence.

The series began publication  in  1979 (original publisher Oceana) with  up to three volumes published annually.   Although many documents included might be available from US government websites,   the value of titles in this series lies with the topical compilation of the documents including some non-US sources ,  along with the expert commentary provided by the editors of each volume.  The current general editor of the series is Doglas C. Lovelace Jr. , Director of the Strategic Studies Institute of the U.S. Army War College.   The series was originally titled Terrorism: Documents of International and Local Control.

According to the Oxford University Press website, the latest volume, 146,  “includes Congressional Research Service reports on security issues concerning the United States, Ukraine, and the Russian Federation, as well as an English-language version of the Military Doctrine of the Russian Federation made available to the public, NATO’s Framework for Future Alliance Operations, and recent studies on Russia’s hybrid warfare from the NATO Defense College and the Joint Special Operations University Press .”

The Law Library holds the complete set from volume 1, shelved  at call number HV6421 T464.  For a listing of the title of each volume see the Library catalogue record .  The titles can be borrowed.  A multi-volume index is part of the series.  The index includes five sections: Subject Index, Title, Index, Name Index, Index by Year, and Subject by Year.

Related reference work:

The Sage Encyclopedia of Terrorism [electronic resource]  (2011, 2nd ed.) ed.