According to the University of Utah, whose College of Social and Behavioral Science lists Hammond among its distinguished alumni, "The distinguishing feature of his career was an ability to enrich academic research with insider perspective and knowledge obtained through carefully designed personal interviews with major and minor players".[3] In doing so, Hammond sought to develop a more discerning understanding of how organizational behavior and domestic political considerations affected all aspects of nuclear strategy and American foreign policy.[2][1]
American historian Stanley Kutler's work has characterized Hammond's 1961 book Organizing for Defense: The American Military Establishment in the 20th Century as "an excellent history of the development of defense organization through the Eisenhower administration".[5]
National security author Mark D. Mandeles, speaking in 2013, said Organizing for Defense still "retained considerable relevance and importance today".[6]
Writing for the journal Defense Analysis in 1989, Michael D. Yaffe wrote of the 1962 book Strategy, Politics, and Defense Budgets, which Hammond was joint author of along with Warner R. Schilling and Glenn H. Snyder, that 25 years later "their insights about defense planning still ring true" and that the book was a landmark of defense-policy literature.[7] Hammond's part was a detailed, interviews-based analysis of the formulation of NSC 68 that is regarded as a classic contribution that has not been surpassed in the years since.[1][8]
Another prominent work of Hammond's was the 1975 textbook Cold War and Détente: The American Foreign Policy Process Since 1945,[1][2] which was a revision and updating of his 1969 text The Cold War Years: American Foreign Policy since 1945.[9] A review of it for The History Teacher stated that "High points of the book include analysis of the array of options available at critical times and description of the complex roles of various actors in deciding foreign policy in a democratic system."[9] In his texts Hammond disagreed with the "New Left" of American foreign policy revisionism and instead believed that the Cold War represented largely reasonable U.S. responses to Soviet provocations.[9]
The Paul Y. Hammond Memorial Lecture is given annually at the University of Pittsburgh.[10]
| This section needs additional citations for verification. (January 2018) |
- Organizing for Defense: The American Military Establishment in the 20th Century (Princeton University Press, 1961)
- Strategy, Politics, and Defense Budgets (Columbia University Press, 1962) [co-author with Warner R. Schilling and Glenn H. Snyder]
- The Cold War Years: American Foreign Policy since 1945 (Harcourt, Brace and World, 1969)
- Political Dynamics in the Middle East (American Elsevier, 1972) [co-editor with Sidney S. Alexander]
- Cold War and Détente: The American Foreign Policy Process Since 1945 (Harcourt College Publishers, 1975)
- The Reluctant Supplier: U. S. Decision-Making for Arms Sales (Oelgeschlager, Gunn & Hain, 1983) [co-author with David J. Louscher, Michael D. Salomone, and Norman A. Graham]
- LBJ and the Presidential Management of Foreign Relations (University of Texas Press, 1992)
Kutler, Stanley I., ed. (1996). Encyclopedia of the United States in the Twentieth Century, Volume 2. Charles Scribner's Sons. p. 618.
Yaffe, Michael D. (Summer 1989). "Landmarks in Defense Literature: Strategy, Politics and Defense Budgets". Defense Analysis. 5 (2): 163–166. doi:10.1080/07430178908405394.