Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "New generation warfare" in English language version.
Analysts, practitioners, and scholars alike have struggled to come to terms with such uses, assigning labels such as 'hybrid wars', 'new generation wars', and 'gray-zone' conflicts, among others, to distinguish contemporary practices from those of so-called traditional wars. While the original aim of such labeling or relabeling may have been to draw the attention of busy policymakers to emerging security issues, it has evolved into something of a culture of replication in which the labels are repeated more out of habit than reflection.
Analysts, practitioners, and scholars alike have struggled to come to terms with such uses, assigning labels such as 'hybrid wars', 'new generation wars', and 'gray-zone' conflicts, among others, to distinguish contemporary practices from those of so-called traditional wars. While the original aim of such labeling or relabeling may have been to draw the attention of busy policymakers to emerging security issues, it has evolved into something of a culture of replication in which the labels are repeated more out of habit than reflection.
Analysts, practitioners, and scholars alike have struggled to come to terms with such uses, assigning labels such as 'hybrid wars', 'new generation wars', and 'gray-zone' conflicts, among others, to distinguish contemporary practices from those of so-called traditional wars. While the original aim of such labeling or relabeling may have been to draw the attention of busy policymakers to emerging security issues, it has evolved into something of a culture of replication in which the labels are repeated more out of habit than reflection.