This new analysis of governing ideas in U.S. foreign policy
shows how they arise, are sustained and challenged both
domestically and internationally, and become part of the world
order. Nolan assesses the problems of reconciling concerns for
individual rights and liberal principles with national security
interests in U.S. foreign policy over the course of the twentieth
century. This interpretive survey redefines the key components in
the make-up of U.S. diplomacy and provides good reading for
students of American government, international relations and U.S.
foreign policy, American and world history, defense, and human
rights policy.
This short history traces the notions that liberty is
indivisible and that security depends ultimately on the
establishment and success of liberal-democratic norms between and
within states. It shows how U.S. policy vacillates between giving
active or passive expression to these ideas, always relying on a
basic assumption about the presumed pacific character of democracy.
Utilizing a wide variety of primary and secondary sources, it looks
at how these ideas became manifest in two major policy
settings---those affecting the Soviet Union and the UN. Through
these case studies, the book shows how these ideas become
progressively embedded in U.S. policy; how they have been
challenged by different interests and events; how they were
disseminated among and accepted by allies (and even several former
adversaries); and how, as a result, they now permeate the
structures of major international organizations, and even underlie
the emerging post-Cold War international system as a whole. The
conclusion offers an interesting perspective for the future.
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