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Diplomacy and Capitalism - The Political Economy of U.S. Foreign Relations (Paperback)
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Diplomacy and Capitalism - The Political Economy of U.S. Foreign Relations (Paperback)
Series: Power, Politics, and the World
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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At the same time as modern capitalism became an engine of progress
and a source of inequality, the United States rose to global power.
Hence diplomacy and the forces of capitalism have continually
evolved together and shaped each other at different levels of
international, national, and local transformations. Diplomacy and
Capitalism focuses on the crucial questions of wealth and power in
the United States and the world in the twentieth century. Through a
series of wide-ranging case studies on the history of international
political economy and its array of state and non-state actors, the
volume's authors analyze how material interests and foreign
relations shaped each other. How did the rising and then
disproportionate power of the United States and the actions of
corporations, creditors, diplomats, and soldiers shape the
twentieth-century world? How did officials in the United States and
other nations understand the relationship between foreign
investment and the state? How did people outside of the United
States respond to and shape American diplomacy and
political-economic policy? In detailed discussions of the exchanges
and entanglements of capitalism and diplomacy, the authors answer
these crucial questions. In doing so, they excavate how different
combinations of material interest, geopolitical rivalry, and
ideology helped create the world we live in today. The book thus
analyzes competing and shared visions of international capitalism
and U.S. diplomatic influence in chapters that bring the book's
readers from the dawn of the twentieth century to its end, from
Theodore Roosevelt to Ronald Reagan. Contributors: Abou Bamba,
Giulia Crisanti, Christopher R. W. Dietrich, Max Paul Friedman,
Joseph Fronczak, Alec Hickmott, Jennifer M. Miller, Alanna
O'Malley, Nicole Sackley, Jayita Sarkar, Erum Sattar, Jason Scott
Smith.
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