Defining the National Interest: Conflict and Change in American Foreign Policy

الغلاف الأمامي
University of Chicago Press, 17‏/02‏/1998 - 353 من الصفحات
The United States has been marked by a highly politicized and divisive history of foreign policy-making. Why do the nation's leaders find it so difficult to define the national interest?

Peter Trubowitz offers a new and compelling conception of American foreign policy and the domestic geopolitical forces that shape and animate it. Foreign policy conflict, he argues, is grounded in America's regional diversity. The uneven nature of America's integration into the world economy has made regionalism a potent force shaping fights over the national interest. As Trubowitz shows, politicians from different parts of the country have consistently sought to equate their region's interests with that of the nation. Domestic conflict over how to define the "national interest" is the result. Challenging dominant accounts of American foreign policy-making, Defining the National Interest exemplifies how interdisciplinary scholarship can yield a deeper understanding of the connections between domestic and international change in an era of globalization.
 

المحتوى

Chapter One Regional Conflict and Coalitions in the Making of American Foreign Policy
1
Chapter Two Sectional Conflict and the Great Debates of the 1890s
31
Chapter Three NorthSouth Alliance and the Triumph of Internationalism in the 1930s
96
America Resurgent in the 1980s
169
Chapter Five Geopolitics and Foreign Policy
235
Notes
247
Bibliography
307
Index
333

طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات

عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة

نبذة عن المؤلف (1998)

Peter Trubowitz is associate professor of government at the University of Texas, Austin.

معلومات المراجع