The Center for Military, War, and Society Studies was founded in 2016 to facilitate essential conversations about – and with – the U.S. military, holding national or international symposia that bring together scholars, policy makers, and members of the armed forces.

We foster research on the U.S. military on the KU campus and beyond, supporting scholarship that examines the military not only as an instrument of national defense but also as a central institution in American society. We also support "War and Society" scholarship, asking how changing social and cultural factors help to shape military institutions and affect ways of waging war, how warfare and conflict affect the broader society, economy, and culture of the United States and other nations, and how war and the military are understood and represented in American life.

  • Invading Iraq: Diplomatic, Political, and Military Perspectives

    Symposium Open to the Public - Saturday, March, 4

    Big 12 Room, KU Memorial Union & live on Zoom

  • Teaching Military History Project

    An entire website dedicated to integrating military history into into graduate, undergraduate, and 6-12 curricula, complete with sample syllabi, assignments, and pedagogical essays.

  • The War on Drugs Companion Webpage

    Companion to the newly published volume The War on Drugs: A History. It includes a teaching guide for each chapter, containing both questions and a list of key terms and themes; a timeline for the war on drugs; and a list of primary sources useful for teaching about this topic.

  • Publications

    Publications stemming from the symposia hosted by the Center.