Marktplatzangebote
Ein Angebot für € 2,95 €
  • Broschiertes Buch

The strength and prestige of democracy worldwide at the end of the twentieth century are due in good measure to the impact of America on international affairs, argues Tony Smith. Here for the first time is a book that documents the extraordinary history of American foreign policy with respect to the promotion of democracy worldwide, an effort whose greatest triumph came in the occupations of Japan and Germany but whose setbacks include interventions in Latin America and Vietnam.
Review:
... Tony Smith argues persuasively that liberal internationalism is not, as Kissinger sometimes
…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
The strength and prestige of democracy worldwide at the end of the twentieth century are due in good measure to the impact of America on international affairs, argues Tony Smith. Here for the first time is a book that documents the extraordinary history of American foreign policy with respect to the promotion of democracy worldwide, an effort whose greatest triumph came in the occupations of Japan and Germany but whose setbacks include interventions in Latin America and Vietnam.

Review:
... Tony Smith argues persuasively that liberal internationalism is not, as Kissinger sometimes implies, a cultural quirk of unsophisticated Americans. Rather, it has built on powerful global historical trends. Francis Fukuyama(The New Republic)

... This work, formidable in scope and scholarship, is a rousing defense of liberal Wilsonian internationalism. . . . [Smith's] historical account [of attempts to implant democracy] is accompanied by a sophisticated analysis of the perspectives on democratization of Marxists, comparativists, and realists, who hold respectively, says the author, that the United States will not, cannot, and should not promote democracy worldwide. David C. Hendrickson(Foreign Affairs)

... America's Mission is a book with a mission. It's aim . . . is nothing less than to overthrow the hitherto dominant theory dealing with American foreign affairs and to put in its place a different one. Theodore Draper(New York Review of Books)

... [Smith's] account of the 20th century is just about as close to unputdownable as it gets in the genre of political history, and ends up advocating what seems to be an appropriate level of optimism for what remains, after all, a terrifying and chaotic world. (Washington Post)

... America's Mission provides a comprehensive historical review of the record of American liberal internationalism. Tony Smith argues persuasively that liberal internationalism is not a cultural quirk of unsophisticated Americans. Rather, it has built on powerful global historical trends. The liberal internationalist streak in American foreign policy has, in turn, been responsible for shaping a liberal world order conducive to American security and economic interests. (New Republic)

... This contentious study of US foreign policy is sure to generate new debates about the ideals and realities that inspire and legitimize US foreign policy. (Choice)

Table of contents:



Foreword




Preface




Acknowledgments



Ch. 1
The United States and the Global Struggle for Democracy
3

Pt. I
Liberal Democratic Internationalism and American Foreign Policy, 1898-1921
35

Ch. 2
Democracy in the Philippines
37

Ch. 3
Wilson and Democracy in Latin America
60

Ch. 4
Wilson and a World Safe for Democracy
84

Pt. II
Liberal Democratic Internationalism, 1933-1947
111

Ch. 5
FDR and World Order: Globalizing the Monroe Doctrine
113

Ch. 6
Democratizing Japan and Germany
146

Pt. III
Liberal Democratic Internationalism and the Cold War, 1947-1977
177

Ch. 7
Eisenhower and His Legacy, 1953-1977
179

Ch. 8
Kennedy's Alliance for Progress, 1961-1965
214

Pt. IV
Liberal Democratic Internationalism and the Cold War, 1977-1989
237

Ch. 9
Carter's Human Rights Campaign
239

Ch. 10
Reagan's Democratic Revolution
266

Pt. V
Toward the Year 2000
309

Ch. 11
After the Cold War: Wilsonianism Resurgent?
311


Appendix: Notes on the Study of the International Origins of Democracy
346


Notes
369


Bibliography
419


Index
445

"A historically sweeping, theoretically ambitious study of American attempts at promoting liberal democracy abroad, this is the most subtle and thorough examination of a "mission" that has had more than its share of successes, halts, detours, and deviations. No student of America in this world will be able to ignore it: there is simply no comparable volume."--Stanley Hoffmann, Chairman, Center for European Studies, Dillon Professor of the Civilization of France

"No one concerned with America's role in the world can afford to ignore the powerful argument and impressive scholarship of this landmark study."--Ronald Steel, University of Southern California, School of International Relations

"Breathtaking in its coverage. . . . The author combines historical narrative with political analysis in dazzling fashion, particularly on Woodrow Wilson, whose pragmatic idealism is the leitmotif of this book."--Arthur S. Link, Princeton University