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Commentators frequently call the United States an empire:
occasionally a benign empire, sometimes an empire in denial, and
often a destructive empire. Elizabeth Cobbs Hoffman asserts instead
that, because of its unusual federal structure, America has
performed the role of umpire since 1776, compelling adherence to
rules that gradually earned collective approval. This provocative
reinterpretation traces America's role in the world from the days
of George Washington, Abraham Lincoln, and Franklin D. Roosevelt to
the present. Cobbs Hoffman argues that the United States has been
the pivot of a transformation that began outside its borders and
before its founding, in which nation-states replaced the empires
that had dominated history. The "Western" values that America is
often accused of imposing were, in fact, the result of this global
shift. American Umpire explores the rise of three values-access to
opportunity, arbitration of disputes, and transparency in
government and business-and finds that the United States is
distinctive not in its embrace of these practices but in its
willingness to persuade and even coerce others to comply. But
America's leadership is problematic as well as potent. The nation
has both upheld and violated the rules. Taking sides in explosive
disputes imposes significant financial and psychic costs. By
definition, umpires cannot win. American Umpire offers a powerful
new framework for reassessing the country's role over the past 250
years. Amid urgent questions about future choices, this book asks
who, if not the United States, might enforce these new rules of
world order?
The nation was powerful and prosperous, the president was vigorous
and young, and a confident generation was gathering its forces to
test the New Frontier. The cold war was well under way, but if you
could just, as the song went, "put a little love in your heart,"
then "the world would be a better place." The Peace Corps,
conceived in the can-do spirit of the sixties, embodied America's
long pursuit of moral leadership on a global scale. Traversing four
decades and three continents, this story of the Peace Corps and the
people and politics behind it is a fascinating look at American
idealism at work amid the hard political realities of the second
half of the twentieth century. More than any other entity, the
Peace Corps broached an age-old dilemma of U.S. foreign policy: how
to reconcile the imperatives and temptations of power politics with
the ideals of freedom and self-determination for all nations. All
You Need Is Love follows the struggle to balance the tensions
between these values from the Corps' first heady days under Sargent
Shriver and beyond to the questioning years of the Vietnam War,
when the Peace Corps was accused of being window dressing for
imperialism. It follows the Peace Corps through the years when
volunteering dropped off-and finally into its renewed popularity
amid the widespread conviction that the Peace Corps preserves the
nation's finest traditions. With vivid stories from returned
volunteers of exotic places and daunting circumstances, this is an
engrossing account of the successes and failures of this unique
governmental organization, and of the geopolitics and personal
convictions that underpin it. In the end, the question that is most
compelling is whether the Peace Corps most helped the countries
that received its volunteers, or whether its greater service was to
America and its sense of national identity and mission.
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