08947cam a2200337 a 4500
191846782
OCoLC
20220414092235.0
080118s2009 nju b 001 0 eng
2008002781
9780136037507
(pbk.)
013603750x
(pbk.)
(OCoLC)191846782
(OCoLC)176888801
DLC
eng
DLC
BAKER
YDXCP
BTCTA
C#P
BWX
OCLCQ
HDC
OCLCF
OCLCO
OCLCQ
OCL
n-us---
E183.7
.H27 2009
327.73
Hastedt, Glenn P.,
1950-
American foreign policy :
past, present, future /
Glenn P. Hastedt
7th ed
Upper Saddle River, N.J. :
Pearson/Prentice Hall,
c2009
xvi, 464 p. ;
23 cm
Includes bibliographical references and index
Chapter 1
The Global Setting of American Foreign Policy
1 --
Why the International System Matters
1 --
The International System: Structural Constraints
2 --
Decentralization
2 --
Self-Help System
3 --
A Stratified System
3 --
The International System: Cold War Trends
4 --
Diffusion of Power
4 --
Issue Proliferation
5 --
Actor Proliferation
7 --
Regional Diversity
8 --
The Contemporary International System: Dominant Features
9 --
Globalization
10 --
American Hegemony
11 --
America and the World: Attitudes and Perceptions
14 --
Chapter 2
The Foreign Policy Agenda: Past, Present, and Future
19 --
Foreign Policy Problems
19 --
What Do Americans Want in Foreign Policy?
20 --
Thinking About Foreign Policy Problems
21 --
The National Interest
23 --
Grand Strategy
25 --
Presidential Foreign Policy Doctrines
28 --
The Truman Doctrine
28 --
The Nixon Doctrine
29 --
The Carter Doctrine
30 --
The Reagan Doctrine
32 --
The Bush Doctrine
34 --
Foreign Policy Doctrines Evaluated
35 --
Terrorism as a Foreign Policy Problem
39 --
Terrorism
41 --
Combatting Terrorism
44 --
Strategy
48 --
Chapter 3
The American National Style
56 --
Isolationism versus Internationalism
58 --
Sources of the American National Style
60 --
Unilateralism
62 --
Moral Pragmatism
64 --
Legalism
67 --
Consequences of the American National Style
68 --
A Revival of Wilsonianism?
71 --
Other Voices from the Past
73 --
Chapter 4
Learning from the Past
77 --
How Do Policy Makers Learn from the Past?
77 --
Events Policy Makers Learn from
79 --
Types of Calculations Made about Those Events
81 --
Learning from the Past: Case Studies
83 --
The Cold War
83 --
The Vietnam War
92 --
The Iraq War
100 --
Chapter 5
The Domestic Context of American Foreign Policy
114 --
The Media and American Foreign Policy
115 --
The New Media and American Foreign Policy
118 --
The Media, Public Opinion, and War
120 --
Public Opinion
123 --
Trends and Content
124 --
Public Opinion and the Use of Force
126 --
Impact
129 --
Elections
130 --
Voter Knowledge and Issue Voting
131 --
Party and Candidate Differences
132 --
Impact
133 --
Interest Groups
134 --
Types of Interest Groups
135 --
Impact
144 --
Political Protest
146 --
Policy-Maker Response
147 --
An Example: The Public Use of Intelligence and the Iraq War
148 --
Chapter 6
The Constitution and Foreign Affairs
156 --
Treaty-Making Powers
157 --
Senatorial Advice and Consent
157 --
Executive Agreements
161 --
The Role of the House in the Panama Canal Treaties
163 --
Appointment Powers
164 --
War Powers
167 --
War Powers Resolution
168 --
Civil Liberties
170 --
Commerce Powers
173 --
Federalism and the States
176 --
Chapter 7
The Presidency
184 --
When Does the President Matter?
186 --
Presidential Personality
187 --
Presidential Managerial Style
190 --
Presidential Bureaucracy
192 --
The National Security Council
192 --
The War Czar
196 --
Other White House Voices
196 --
The Vice President
196 --
The White House Chief of Staff
197 --
Presidential Decision Making
199 --
Presidential Transitions
199 --
Chapter 8
Congress and Foreign Policy
205 --
Congressional Structure and Foreign Policy
205 --
Blunt Foreign Policy Tools
205 --
Decentralization
216 --
Policy Entrepreneurship
217 --
Staff Aides
219 --
The Influence of Party and Region
219 --
Outsourcing Foreign Policy
220 --
Congress and the President
224 --
Constants
224 --
The Changing Relationship
225 --
Chapter 9
The Foreign Affairs Bureaucracy
230 --
The State Department
231 --
Structure and Growth
231 --
The State Department's Value System
233 --
Impact on Foreign Policy
238 --
The Defense Department
239 --
Structure and Growth
239 --
The Defense Department's Value System
241 --
Impact on Foreign Policy
246 --
CIA and the Intelligence Community
247 --
Structure and Growth
247 --
The Intelligence Community's Value System
252 --
Impact on Foreign Policy
255 --
The Domestic Bureaucracies
256 --
Treasury, Commerce, and Agriculture
256 --
Homeland Security
257 --
Policy Makers' Response
259 --
Chapter 10
Models of Policy Making: Overview
265 --
The Rational Actor Model
266 --
The Bureaucratic Politics Model
267 --
The Small-Group Decision-Making Model
269 --
Elite Theory and Pluralism
273 --
Summary: Integrating Models and Additional Possibilities
276 --
Chapter 11
Decision Making: Case Studies
281 --
The Cuban Missile Crisis
281 --
The Crisis: An Overview
281 --
Three Views of the Cuban Missile Crisis
284 --
Pre-9/11 Intelligence Policy on Terrorism
287 --
The Intelligence Cycle
287 --
Intelligence on Terrorism Before 9/11
288 --
Three Views of an Intelligence Failure
293 --
Negotiating the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)
295 --
The Bargaining Phase
295 --
The Ratification Phase
298 --
Chapter 12
Diplomacy
303 --
Selecting a Policy Instrument
303 --
Bilateral Diplomacy
305 --
Incentives Versus Sanctions
307 --
Bilateralism Versus Multilateralism
307 --
Summit Diplomacy
308 --
East-West Superpower Summits
309 --
Economic Summits
310 --
Conference Diplomacy
311 --
GATT and WTO
311 --
Environmental Conferences
315 --
UN Diplomacy
317 --
Public Diplomacy
318 --
The Political Use of Force
320 --
Post-Cold War Coercive Diplomacy
320 --
Nuclear Diplomacy
321 --
Arms Transfers
322 --
Chapter 13
Covert Action
330 --
Techniques of Covert Action
331 --
Post-Cold War Covert Action
339 --
The Covert War Against Osama bin Laden
339 --
Renditions
340 --
Controlling Covert Action
341 --
Era of Trust
342 --
Era of Skepticism
344 --
Era of Uneasy Partnership
346 --
Congress as Impatient Overseer
348 --
Chapter 14
Economic Instruments
354 --
Strategic Outlooks
355 --
Trade Strategies
355 --
Monetary Strategies
360 --
Economic Sanctions
361 --
Inventory of Options
363 --
Rules of Economic Conflict
367 --
Smart Sanctions
368 --
Foreign Aid
369 --
Types of Foreign Aid
371 --
Cold War Foreign Aid
373 --
Post-Cold War Foreign Aid
374 --
Post-9/11 Foreign Aid
375 --
Chapter 15
Military Power
381 --
Development of U.S. and Soviet Nuclear Arsenals
382 --
What Does It All Mean?
384 --
A Historical Survey of U.S. Nuclear Strategy
387 --
Post-Cold War Nuclear Strategy
391 --
The U.S. Strategic Nuclear Arsenal
391 --
U.S. Nuclear Strategy
392 --
Bridging the Nuclear-Conventional Divide
394 --
Deterrence
394 --
Preemption
396 --
Asymmetric Conflicts
397 --
Strategies for the Use of Conventional Military Force
397 --
War Fighting
399 --
Humanitarian/Peacekeeping Operations
401 --
Terrorism/Counterinsurgency Conflicts
403 --
Chapter 16
Arms Control and Missile Defense
408 --
Judging Success and Failure
408 --
Superpower Arms Control and Disarmament
409 --
1946 to 1957
410 --
1958 to 1972
411 --
1973 to 1988
412 --
1989 to 2001
414 --
2001 to Present
416 --
Defense
418 --
The Strategic Defense Initiative
418 --
Missile Defense Systems
419 --
Counterproliferation
421 --
The Post-Cold War Agenda
422 --
Proliferation of Weapons of Mass Destruction
422 --
Proliferation of Conventional Weapons
424 --
Combining Approaches
425 --
Chapter 17
Alternative Futures
430 --
Choices
430 --
Alternative Futures
432 --
The United States as an Ordinary State
432 --
Reformed America
433 --
The United States as a Global Manager
435 --
Pragmatic America
436 --
Neocontainment
438 --
Triumphant America
439 --
American Crusader
440 --
America the Balancer
442 --
Disengaged America
443
United States
Foreign relations
United States
Foreign relations
1945-1989
United States
Foreign relations
1989-
United States
Foreign relations administration
Table of contents only
http://catdir.loc.gov/catdir/toc/ecip0810/2008002781.html
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First Floor - Mass communication
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2016-11-16 00:00:00
2016-11-16
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