000 08947cam a2200337 a 4500
001 191846782
003 OCoLC
005 20220414092235.0
008 080118s2009 nju b 001 0 eng
010 _a2008002781
020 _a9780136037507
_c(pbk.)
020 _a013603750x
_c(pbk.)
035 _a(OCoLC)191846782
_z(OCoLC)176888801
040 _aDLC
_beng
_cDLC
_dBAKER
_dYDXCP
_dBTCTA
_dC#P
_dBWX
_dOCLCQ
_dHDC
_dOCLCF
_dOCLCO
_dOCLCQ
_dOCL
043 _an-us---
050 0 0 _aE183.7
_b.H27 2009
082 _a327.73
100 1 _aHastedt, Glenn P.,
_d1950-
245 1 0 _aAmerican foreign policy :
_bpast, present, future /
_cGlenn P. Hastedt
250 _a7th ed
260 _aUpper Saddle River, N.J. :
_bPearson/Prentice Hall,
_cc2009
300 _axvi, 464 p. ;
_c23 cm
504 _aIncludes bibliographical references and index
505 0 0 _gChapter 1
_tThe Global Setting of American Foreign Policy
_g1 --
_tWhy the International System Matters
_g1 --
_tThe International System: Structural Constraints
_g2 --
_tDecentralization
_g2 --
_tSelf-Help System
_g3 --
_tA Stratified System
_g3 --
_tThe International System: Cold War Trends
_g4 --
_tDiffusion of Power
_g4 --
_tIssue Proliferation
_g5 --
_tActor Proliferation
_g7 --
_tRegional Diversity
_g8 --
_tThe Contemporary International System: Dominant Features
_g9 --
_tGlobalization
_g10 --
_tAmerican Hegemony
_g11 --
_tAmerica and the World: Attitudes and Perceptions
_g14 --
_gChapter 2
_tThe Foreign Policy Agenda: Past, Present, and Future
_g19 --
_tForeign Policy Problems
_g19 --
_tWhat Do Americans Want in Foreign Policy?
_g20 --
_tThinking About Foreign Policy Problems
_g21 --
_tThe National Interest
_g23 --
_tGrand Strategy
_g25 --
_tPresidential Foreign Policy Doctrines
_g28 --
_tThe Truman Doctrine
_g28 --
_tThe Nixon Doctrine
_g29 --
_tThe Carter Doctrine
_g30 --
_tThe Reagan Doctrine
_g32 --
_tThe Bush Doctrine
_g34 --
_tForeign Policy Doctrines Evaluated
_g35 --
_tTerrorism as a Foreign Policy Problem
_g39 --
_tTerrorism
_g41 --
_tCombatting Terrorism
_g44 --
_tStrategy
_g48 --
_gChapter 3
_tThe American National Style
_g56 --
_tIsolationism versus Internationalism
_g58 --
_tSources of the American National Style
_g60 --
_tUnilateralism
_g62 --
_tMoral Pragmatism
_g64 --
_tLegalism
_g67 --
_tConsequences of the American National Style
_g68 --
_tA Revival of Wilsonianism?
_g71 --
_tOther Voices from the Past
_g73 --
_gChapter 4
_tLearning from the Past
_g77 --
_tHow Do Policy Makers Learn from the Past?
_g77 --
_tEvents Policy Makers Learn from
_g79 --
_tTypes of Calculations Made about Those Events
_g81 --
_tLearning from the Past: Case Studies
_g83 --
_tThe Cold War
_g83 --
_tThe Vietnam War
_g92 --
_tThe Iraq War
_g100 --
_gChapter 5
_tThe Domestic Context of American Foreign Policy
_g114 --
_tThe Media and American Foreign Policy
_g115 --
_tThe New Media and American Foreign Policy
_g118 --
_tThe Media, Public Opinion, and War
_g120 --
_tPublic Opinion
_g123 --
_tTrends and Content
_g124 --
_tPublic Opinion and the Use of Force
_g126 --
_tImpact
_g129 --
_tElections
_g130 --
_tVoter Knowledge and Issue Voting
_g131 --
_tParty and Candidate Differences
_g132 --
_tImpact
_g133 --
_tInterest Groups
_g134 --
_tTypes of Interest Groups
_g135 --
_tImpact
_g144 --
_tPolitical Protest
_g146 --
_tPolicy-Maker Response
_g147 --
_tAn Example: The Public Use of Intelligence and the Iraq War
_g148 --
_gChapter 6
_tThe Constitution and Foreign Affairs
_g156 --
_tTreaty-Making Powers
_g157 --
_tSenatorial Advice and Consent
_g157 --
_tExecutive Agreements
_g161 --
_tThe Role of the House in the Panama Canal Treaties
_g163 --
_tAppointment Powers
_g164 --
_tWar Powers
_g167 --
_tWar Powers Resolution
_g168 --
_tCivil Liberties
_g170 --
_tCommerce Powers
_g173 --
_tFederalism and the States
_g176 --
_gChapter 7
_tThe Presidency
_g184 --
_tWhen Does the President Matter?
_g186 --
_tPresidential Personality
_g187 --
_tPresidential Managerial Style
_g190 --
_tPresidential Bureaucracy
_g192 --
_tThe National Security Council
_g192 --
_tThe War Czar
_g196 --
_tOther White House Voices
_g196 --
_tThe Vice President
_g196 --
_tThe White House Chief of Staff
_g197 --
_tPresidential Decision Making
_g199 --
_tPresidential Transitions
_g199 --
_gChapter 8
_tCongress and Foreign Policy
_g205 --
_tCongressional Structure and Foreign Policy
_g205 --
_tBlunt Foreign Policy Tools
_g205 --
_tDecentralization
_g216 --
_tPolicy Entrepreneurship
_g217 --
_tStaff Aides
_g219 --
_tThe Influence of Party and Region
_g219 --
_tOutsourcing Foreign Policy
_g220 --
_tCongress and the President
_g224 --
_tConstants
_g224 --
_tThe Changing Relationship
_g225 --
_gChapter 9
_tThe Foreign Affairs Bureaucracy
_g230 --
_tThe State Department
_g231 --
_tStructure and Growth
_g231 --
_tThe State Department's Value System
_g233 --
_tImpact on Foreign Policy
_g238 --
_tThe Defense Department
_g239 --
_tStructure and Growth
_g239 --
_tThe Defense Department's Value System
_g241 --
_tImpact on Foreign Policy
_g246 --
_tCIA and the Intelligence Community
_g247 --
_tStructure and Growth
_g247 --
_tThe Intelligence Community's Value System
_g252 --
_tImpact on Foreign Policy
_g255 --
_tThe Domestic Bureaucracies
_g256 --
_tTreasury, Commerce, and Agriculture
_g256 --
_tHomeland Security
_g257 --
_tPolicy Makers' Response
_g259 --
_gChapter 10
_tModels of Policy Making: Overview
_g265 --
_tThe Rational Actor Model
_g266 --
_tThe Bureaucratic Politics Model
_g267 --
_tThe Small-Group Decision-Making Model
_g269 --
_tElite Theory and Pluralism
_g273 --
_tSummary: Integrating Models and Additional Possibilities
_g276 --
_gChapter 11
_tDecision Making: Case Studies
_g281 --
_tThe Cuban Missile Crisis
_g281 --
_tThe Crisis: An Overview
_g281 --
_tThree Views of the Cuban Missile Crisis
_g284 --
_tPre-9/11 Intelligence Policy on Terrorism
_g287 --
_tThe Intelligence Cycle
_g287 --
_tIntelligence on Terrorism Before 9/11
_g288 --
_tThree Views of an Intelligence Failure
_g293 --
_tNegotiating the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)
_g295 --
_tThe Bargaining Phase
_g295 --
_tThe Ratification Phase
_g298 --
_gChapter 12
_tDiplomacy
_g303 --
_tSelecting a Policy Instrument
_g303 --
_tBilateral Diplomacy
_g305 --
_tIncentives Versus Sanctions
_g307 --
_tBilateralism Versus Multilateralism
_g307 --
_tSummit Diplomacy
_g308 --
_tEast-West Superpower Summits
_g309 --
_tEconomic Summits
_g310 --
_tConference Diplomacy
_g311 --
_tGATT and WTO
_g311 --
_tEnvironmental Conferences
_g315 --
_tUN Diplomacy
_g317 --
_tPublic Diplomacy
_g318 --
_tThe Political Use of Force
_g320 --
_tPost-Cold War Coercive Diplomacy
_g320 --
_tNuclear Diplomacy
_g321 --
_tArms Transfers
_g322 --
_gChapter 13
_tCovert Action
_g330 --
_tTechniques of Covert Action
_g331 --
_tPost-Cold War Covert Action
_g339 --
_tThe Covert War Against Osama bin Laden
_g339 --
_tRenditions
_g340 --
_tControlling Covert Action
_g341 --
_tEra of Trust
_g342 --
_tEra of Skepticism
_g344 --
_tEra of Uneasy Partnership
_g346 --
_tCongress as Impatient Overseer
_g348 --
_gChapter 14
_tEconomic Instruments
_g354 --
_tStrategic Outlooks
_g355 --
_tTrade Strategies
_g355 --
_tMonetary Strategies
_g360 --
_tEconomic Sanctions
_g361 --
_tInventory of Options
_g363 --
_tRules of Economic Conflict
_g367 --
_tSmart Sanctions
_g368 --
_tForeign Aid
_g369 --
_tTypes of Foreign Aid
_g371 --
_tCold War Foreign Aid
_g373 --
_tPost-Cold War Foreign Aid
_g374 --
_tPost-9/11 Foreign Aid
_g375 --
_gChapter 15
_tMilitary Power
_g381 --
_tDevelopment of U.S. and Soviet Nuclear Arsenals
_g382 --
_tWhat Does It All Mean?
_g384 --
_tA Historical Survey of U.S. Nuclear Strategy
_g387 --
_tPost-Cold War Nuclear Strategy
_g391 --
_tThe U.S. Strategic Nuclear Arsenal
_g391 --
_tU.S. Nuclear Strategy
_g392 --
_tBridging the Nuclear-Conventional Divide
_g394 --
_tDeterrence
_g394 --
_tPreemption
_g396 --
_tAsymmetric Conflicts
_g397 --
_tStrategies for the Use of Conventional Military Force
_g397 --
_tWar Fighting
_g399 --
_tHumanitarian/Peacekeeping Operations
_g401 --
_tTerrorism/Counterinsurgency Conflicts
_g403 --
_gChapter 16
_tArms Control and Missile Defense
_g408 --
_tJudging Success and Failure
_g408 --
_tSuperpower Arms Control and Disarmament
_g409 --
_t1946 to 1957
_g410 --
_t1958 to 1972
_g411 --
_t1973 to 1988
_g412 --
_t1989 to 2001
_g414 --
_t2001 to Present
_g416 --
_tDefense
_g418 --
_tThe Strategic Defense Initiative
_g418 --
_tMissile Defense Systems
_g419 --
_tCounterproliferation
_g421 --
_tThe Post-Cold War Agenda
_g422 --
_tProliferation of Weapons of Mass Destruction
_g422 --
_tProliferation of Conventional Weapons
_g424 --
_tCombining Approaches
_g425 --
_gChapter 17
_tAlternative Futures
_g430 --
_tChoices
_g430 --
_tAlternative Futures
_g432 --
_tThe United States as an Ordinary State
_g432 --
_tReformed America
_g433 --
_tThe United States as a Global Manager
_g435 --
_tPragmatic America
_g436 --
_tNeocontainment
_g438 --
_tTriumphant America
_g439 --
_tAmerican Crusader
_g440 --
_tAmerica the Balancer
_g442 --
_tDisengaged America
_g443
651 0 _aUnited States
_xForeign relations
651 0 _aUnited States
_xForeign relations
_y1945-1989
651 0 _aUnited States
_xForeign relations
_y1989-
651 0 _aUnited States
_xForeign relations administration
856 4 1 _3Table of contents only
_uhttp://catdir.loc.gov/catdir/toc/ecip0810/2008002781.html
942 _2ddc
_cBK
999 _c556
_d556