Daniel S. Chard is visiting assistant professor of history at Western Washington University.
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Description
"An ambitious book that engages with several disciplines and historical subfields. Scholars of counterterrorism will benefit from Chard's analysis of the escalating cycles of violence, and he adds important nuance and clarity to the history of Watergate. . . . Nixon's War at Home will serve as a critical foundation for further research on the counterintelligence operations that succeeded the COINTELPROs."-H-War "An immersive and eye-opening account of how the Nixon administration's fight against the Weather Underground, the Black Liberation Army, and other insurgent groups gave rise to counterterrorism tactics and philosophies of 'punitive policing' that reshaped American politics. . . . Making excellent use of declassified FBI documents, Nixon's White House tapes, and other sources, Chard shines a light on this turbulent era."--Publishers Weekly "An impressive first book by a young historian. . . . Nixon's War at Home offers genuine contributions to the continuing examination of the Long Sixties."--CHOICE "Besides being a well-documented research project supported by a robust amount of references, the book is successful in explaining the conceptual development of counterterrorism."--The Society for U.S. Intellectual History

