The Future of U.S. Foreign Policy
ROBERT JERVIS AND LOREN MORALES KANDO, EDITORS

2008 · 224 pages
ISBN13: 978-1-884853-07-4
ISBN10: 1-884853-07-2

Paperback: $25.50 (APS Members: $20.40)

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ABOUT THIS BOOK

The Future of U.S. Foreign Policy brings together in one volume essays that explore recent developments in American foreign relations. In addition to examining the conditions that inform U.S. strategy, the book discusses international reactions to U.S. military and geopolitical power. A concluding section addresses the role of human rights and civil liberties in the construction and implementation of U.S. policies.

From Robert Jervis’s introduction to the book:

“All of these issues will confront the new administration. It will have to decide whether and how to seek democracy abroad, how to set priorities among competing foreign policy goals, how much the counter-terrorism agenda should drive American foreign policy, how to deal with human rights abuses abroad, and what to do about prisoners currently held at Guantanamo Bay or captured in the future. Constructing a coherent and effective policy will be a challenge as great as those the country faced in 1945 and failed to meet in 2001–02.”


TABLE OF CONTENTS

Introduction
Robert Jervis

PART I: AMERICAN WAYS OF FOREIGN POLICY AND FOREIGN RESPONSES

The Lessons of September 11, Iraq, and the American Pendulum
Christopher Hemmer

From the ‘‘Red Juggernaut’’ to Iraqi WMD: Threat Inflation and How It Succeeds in the United States
Jeffery M. Cavanaugh

The Rise of a European Defense
Seth G. Jones

PART II: THE NEOCONSERVATIVE HERITAGE AND ITS FLAWS

‘‘The Civilization of Clashes’’: Misapplying the Democratic Peace in the Middle East
Piki Ish-Shalom

Credibility and the War on Terror
Christopher J. Fettweis

PART III: HUMAN RIGHTS AND CIVIL LIBERTIES

U.S. Human Rights Policy in the Post-Cold War Era
John W. Deitrich

The Rhetoric of Genocide in U.S. Foreign Policy: Rwanda and Darfur Compared
Eric A. Heinze

Tragic Choices in the War on Terrorism: Should We Try to Regulate and Control Torture?
Jerome Slater

About PSQ's Editor

ROBERT Y. SHAPIRO

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