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Rethinking U.S. World Power


Rethinking U.S. World Power

Domestic Histories of U.S. Foreign Relations

von: Daniel Bessner, Michael Brenes

139,09 €

Verlag: Palgrave Macmillan
Format: PDF
Veröffentl.: 06.03.2024
ISBN/EAN: 9783031496776
Sprache: englisch

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Beschreibungen

Since the late-1990s, diplomatic historians have emphasized the importance of international and transnational processes, flows, and events to the history of the United States in the world. Rethinking U.S. World Power provides an alternative to these scholarly frameworks by assembling a diverse group of historians to explore the impact of the United States and its domestic history on U.S. foreign relations and world affairs. In so doing, the collection underlines that, even in a global age, domestic politics and phenomena were crucial to the history of U.S. foreign policy and international relations more broadly.
<p>&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;I1. Introduction: Rethinking U.S. World Power: Domestic Histories of U.S. Foreign Relations.-&nbsp;2.&nbsp;Recentering the United States in the Historiography of American Foreign Relations.-&nbsp;3.&nbsp;Isolationism/Internationalism: Concepts of American Global Power.-&nbsp;4.&nbsp;U.S. Elites and Scientific Mobilization after World War II.-&nbsp;5.&nbsp;Bread not Bullets: Mobilizing American Farmers for the Postwar World.-&nbsp;6.&nbsp;Slow March to Jerusalem: Domestic Politics and the History of the U.S. Embassy in Israel.-&nbsp;7.&nbsp;Too Sweet a Deal: American “Candy Men” and International Cocoa Negotiations in the 1960s.-&nbsp;8.&nbsp;The Vietnam Moratorium and the Limits of Cold War Congressional Peace Politics.-&nbsp;9.&nbsp;Framing the Narrative of the Indochinese Diaspora: The Citizens Commission on Indochinese Refugees, Domestic Political Actors, and U.S. Foreign Relations.-&nbsp;10.&nbsp;The New York City Fiscal Crisis and the Domestic Originsof Globalization.-&nbsp;10. Squandering the “Peace Dividend”: Domestic Politics and the Political Economy of Defense Conversion, 1989-2000.</p>
<p><b>Daniel Bessner</b> is the Annett H. and Kenneth B. Pyle Associate Professor in American Foreign Policy in the Henry M. Jackson School of International Studies at the University of Washington, USA.</p>

<b>Michael Brenes</b>is Co-Director of the Brady-Johnson Program in Grand Strategy and Lecturer in History at Yale University, USA.<br>
<p>Since the late-1990s, diplomatic historians have emphasized the importance of international and transnational processes, flows, and events to the history of the United States in the world. Rethinking U.S. World Power provides an alternative to these scholarly frameworks by assembling a diverse group of historians to explore the impact of the United States and its domestic history on U.S. foreign relations and world affairs. In so doing, the collection underlines that, even in a global age, domestic politics and phenomena were crucial to the history of U.S. foreign policy and international relations more broadly.<b><br></b></p><p><b>Daniel Bessner</b> is the Annett H. and Kenneth B. Pyle Associate Professor in American Foreign Policy in the Henry M. Jackson School of International Studies at the University of Washington, USA.<br></p><p></p>

<b>Michael Brenes</b> is Co-Director of the Brady-Johnson Program in Grand Strategy and Lecturer in History at Yale University, USA.<br>
Counters the prevailing trends in US historiography to de-center US as leading global power Argues the US remains a key player in geopolitical theatre, in particular the Global South Examines the relationship between US domestic processes and US international relations

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