This is now an archived account until further notice. Follow Department of War Studies School Security Studies for updates on events, research, publications and more related to naval and maritime at King's.
King's Laughton & Corbett Centre
Higher Education
London, London 865 followers
Home to the study of naval history, seapower, navies, maritime affairs and maritime strategy at King's College London.
About us
Home to King's Naval History, Seapower and Maritime Strategy Research. The Laughton Unit and Corbett Seapower Centre educates and researches in the field of naval history, seapower and maritime strategy to support and shape the evolution of aforementioned as a tool across a broad spectrum of disciplines and debates in the world around us. They provide the ideal basis for original and challenging research on all aspects of naval history, seapower studies and maritime strategy.
- Website
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https://www.kcl.ac.uk/research/laughton-naval-unit-group
External link for King's Laughton & Corbett Centre
- Industry
- Higher Education
- Company size
- 2-10 employees
- Headquarters
- London, London
- Type
- Educational
- Specialties
- naval history, maritime strategy, war studies, strategic studies, and military history
Locations
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Primary
Get directions
King's College London
Stand Campus
London, London WC2R 2LS, GB
Updates
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EI’s Paul Lay joins historian Andrew Lambert to discuss in this podcast his book ‘No More Napoleons: How Britain Managed Europe from Waterloo to World War One', Lambert's provocative new study of how Britain maximised its naval and diplomatic prestige to maintain a stable, post-Napoleonic Europe. https://lnkd.in/dPJv-R6F
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‘Navies are Our Guide to Space Strategy.’ A new paper from Dr James W.E. Smith https://lnkd.in/exYj4qAE Paper: https://lnkd.in/exUUgYd4
My latest paper offers new insight to the past, present and future of strategic thought on space. https://lnkd.in/ehHSYXkS
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How does asymmetric advantage differ from strategic advantage? Professor Andrew Lambert argues a return to Corbettian Strategic roots for Britain. https://lnkd.in/e-Njx3Uc
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The Laughton-Corbett Research Fellow Dr James W.E. Smith reviews the UK 2025 defence review in the August edition of Warships IFR: arguing that 'strategy' in modern defence organisation is effectively 'dead in the water'.
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