A Fresh Approach. In his new core text, James L. Ray raises the bar for the study of American foreign policy, bringing original insight, crisper writing, and&BAD:mdash;at last&BAD:mdash;the most current theories to bear on the subject. Though he draws upon the realist, liberal, and radical perspectives, instead of relying on traditional axioms such as &BAD:ldquo;states seek power,&BAD:rdquo; or &BAD:ldquo;states seek security,&BAD:rdquo; Ray starts from the premise that the highest priority of leaders is to stay in power. Ray keenly observes that how leaders respond to their most important domestic constituents is the key to understanding why and how foreign policy decisions are made.In chapters detailing the history of American foreign policy, Ray shows how domestic pressures have shaped in stunning ways foreign policymaking from the birth of the nation, through expansion and annexation, and right up through the Bush administration&BAD:rsquo;s Iraq War. Then, covering the policymaking process, Ray analyzes how various parties inside and outside government influence decisionmaking, with detailed discussions of the role of the media, public opinion, interest groups, the various federal agencies, Congress, and the executive. Ray shows how the ongoing debates around domestic economic and social policies&BAD:mdash;like social security and Medicare&BAD:mdash;have always played a part in the process.Regional Organization. Rather than looking at successive &BAD:ldquo;issues,&BAD:rdquo; the book&BAD:rsquo;s final takes a regional approach, allowing students to think comprehensively about how different sets of issues&BAD:mdash;human security, democratization, intervention, globalization, pollution, interstate wars&BAD:mdash;intersect in specific ways in each of the various regions of the globe. Covering the Americas, Europe, the Middle East, Sub-Saharan Africa, and Asia in turn, Ray deals with events and trends that other books tend to miss.Great Writing, Great Pedagogy. Written in candid and refreshingly jargon-free prose, the text nonetheless delivers the most current scholarship and information. Richly illustrated with maps, photos, tables, and figures students get a strong graphical sense of the importance of the interplay of domestic and foreign concerns. Pedagogical features like &BAD:ldquo;Lessons Learned&BAD:rdquo; boxes and lists of key terms in every chapter reinforce the book&BAD:rsquo;s central approach.Strong Teaching and Learning Support. A suite of ancillary materials help students and instructors prepare for class and exams, including a testbank and PowerPoint lecture slides.
U.S. Foreign Policy Today: American Renewal? This new contributed volume from Steven book and James Scott introduces students to the conduct of foreign policy under the Obama administration.
This book argues that the period of U.S. neutrality at the beginning of World War II was crucial in developing the concepts of interdependence and national security that remain integral to U.S. foreign policy today.
New York : Harcourt , Brace , Jovanovich , 1970 . Campbell , Angus , Philip E. Converse , Warren E. ... Western Political Quarterly 42 ( 1989 ) : 201–24 . Chittick , William O. , Keith R. Billingsley , and Bibliography 227.
In this book, Paul Viotti explores American foreign policy from the founding of the republic in the late 18th Century to the present day.
A legal and historical analysis of Congress's power of the purse can be found in William C. Banks and Peter Raven-Hansen, National Security Law and the Power of the Purse (New York: Oxford University Press, 1994).
This work is of immense value for researchers, students, and others studying foreign policy, international relations, and U.S history.
Beyond Ideology: Politics, Principles, and Partisanship in the U.S. Senate. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2009. Lichter, Robert S., and Daniel R. Amundson. “Less News Is Worse News: Television News Coverage of Congress, 1972–92.
AMERICAN FOREIGN POLICY AND PROCESS (WITH INFOTRAC) is a comprehensive text that uses values and beliefs to organize the topic of foreign policy. The book portrays the way values and...
Politics and Strategy shows that grand strategies are Janus-faced: their formulation has as much to do with a leader's ability to govern at home as it does with maintaining the nation's security abroad.
Written by two renowned political scientists, this is the only available booklength treatment of U.S. foreign policy from 1945 to the present. Spanier and Hook analyze the behavior of the...