American Foreign Policy: A Framework for Analysis
Books / Paperback
Books › Political Science › Public Policy › General
ISBN: 1933116625 / Publisher: CQ Press, February 2006
In introducing American foreign policy, Chittlick (emeritus, political science, U. of Georgia) constructs a framework that posits three separate dimensions of policy opinion--security, economy, and community--for describing and explaining foreign policy decision-making. He maintains this framework throughout his description of the historical development of US foreign policy from 1607 to the present and in thematic chapters on humanitarian intervention and environmental justice; international terrorism, nuclear weapons, and instability in developing countries; and investment, trade, development, and sanctions. Also included are chapters on foreign policy actors, institutionalism, the organizational behavior model, majoritarianism, pluralism, elitism, and democratic and undemocratic sources of foreign policy. Annotation ©2006 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)
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How can students best understand the ideas that animate U.S. foreign policy decisions and the processes that facilitate them? How can they come to terms with the motivations that guide these decision makers? In his distinctive new text, William O. Chittick identifies three value orientations--security, economic, and community--that fundamentally shape U.S. foreign policy choices. Chittick argues that it’s not enough to look at only one of these dimensions--security, in the case of most traditional texts--or even one at a time. Instead, he makes a cogent and convincing case for the systematic study of all three and explains why privileging any one dimension over another leads to oversimplification and faulty decision making. Once students are shown how these value orientations work together in complex and interesting ways, they in turn can bring richer, more insightful analysis to the field.Chittick applies the book’s cohesive analytical framework throughout, covering the history of U.S. foreign policy as well as such contemporary issues as humanitarian interventions, global environmental problems, and international terrorism. He carefully weighs the criteria for different policy options and explores their utility: how effective are trade sanctions? What is the best way to pursue economic development in underdeveloped nations? This comprehensive overview of the policymaking process considers the many policy inputs--the foreign and domestic political, economic, and cultural factors that shape U.S. foreign policy outputs--from the perspective of the three dimensions.Special features worth noting:Part openers provide useful and comprehensive overviews of each section of the book.Unique tables and figures help students understand and apply the framework. Maps and photos further enhance student comprehension.Key terms are bolded throughout the book and listed at the end of each chapter to enable students to identify core concepts.Suggested reading lists at the end of chapters provide rich sources for further study.
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