Get Free Shipping on orders over $79
US Foreign Policy in Context : National Ideology from the Founders to the Bush Doctrine - Adam Quinn

US Foreign Policy in Context

National Ideology from the Founders to the Bush Doctrine

By: Adam Quinn

Paperback | 16 September 2011 | Edition Number 1

At a Glance

Paperback


RRP $124.00

$113.75

or 4 interest-free payments of $28.44 with

 or 

Ships in 3 to 5 business days

This work blends strategic analysis of contemporary US foreign policy with long-term historical discussion, producing an important argument relevant to the debates surrounding both the merits of contemporary US foreign policy and the long-term trends at work in American political culture.

Rather than a detailed historical study of the Bush administration itself, the book seeks to locate Bush within the historical context of the US foreign policy tradition. It makes the case for nationally specific ideological factors as a driver of foreign policy and for importance of interaction between the domestic and the international in the emergence of national strategy.

The contemporary element focuses on critiquing the George W. Bush administration's National Security Strategy, perceived by many as a radical and unwelcome ideological departure from past policy, and its broader foreign policy, concentrating especially on its embrace of liberal universalism and rejection of realism. This critique is supported by the cumulative argument, based upon the historical cases, seeking to explain American leaders' persistent resistance to the prescriptions of realism. Quinn argues for some causal connection between historically evolved ideological constructions and the character of the nation's more recent international strategy.

Providing a valuable addition to the field, this book will be of great interest to scholars in American politics, US foreign policy and US history.

Industry Reviews

'By setting the intellectual stage for Wilson's casting of America's mission as the champion of liberal democracy around the globe, US foreign policy in context not only gives us a better understanding of that emblematic president but also frees us from understanding his successors through a simplistic Wilsonian reference point alone.' -Nicolas Bouchet, International Affairs, Vol. 86, 4, 2010


"Quinn's excellent and ambitious book... has significantly pushed our understandings of recent foreign policy by urging us to think more about the National Security Strategy of 2002 and Bush's foreign policy as in keeping with the potent historical conceptions of internationalism that buttressed those policies. US Foreign Policy in Context should be applauded for crossing disciplinary boundaries and for analysing the crucial, complex, and (recently) understudied subject of national ideology. But most importantly, this book will be debated because it asks critical conceptual questions about the effects of long-term patterns of intellectual change on foreign policy and provides new analytical tools for discerning and locating the ideological and historical-intellectual forces that deeply informed the foreign policy of George W. Bush."- Christopher McKnight Nichols, University of Pennsylvania; Journal of Transatlantic Studies, 9:1

More in Politics & Government

Where It All Went Wrong : The case against John Howard - Amy Remeikis
Is a River Alive? - Robert Macfarlane

RRP $26.99

$22.99

15%
OFF
Plots and Prayers - Niki Savva

RRP $37.99

$30.75

19%
OFF
A Different Kind of Power : A Memoir - Jacinda Ardern

RRP $55.00

$39.99

27%
OFF
The Strange Death of Europe : Immigration, Identity, Islam - Douglas Murray
In the City by the Sea - Kamila Shamsie

RRP $22.99

$20.75

10%
OFF
The Gulag Archipelago : (Abridged edition) - Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn

RRP $24.99

$21.75

13%
OFF
The Origins of Totalitarianism : Penguin Modern Classics - Hannah Arendt
The Art of Gathering : How We Meet and Why It Matters - Priya Parker
Becoming Bulletproof : Life Lessons from a Secret Service Agent - EVY POUMPOURAS
Nineteen Eighty-Four : Collins Classics - George Orwell
Bulldozed : Scott Morrison's Fall and Anthony Albanese's Rise - Niki Savva