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A critical tool for the study of U.S. history, this volume offers
an analysis of important documents and decisions in U.S. foreign
policy from George Washington to Barack Obama. The study of
historical primary documents provides a uniquely beneficial and
insightful view into history. To that end, U.S. Foreign Policy: A
Documentary and Reference Guide presents and interprets important
documents from throughout U.S. history, from the administration of
George Washington to that of Barack Obama. Examining U.S. foreign
policy through this lens identifies the ideals of the United States
during different periods, illuminates the intent behind its
military actions, and reveals how each American president
interpreted his moral responsibilities as leader of one of the most
powerful nations in the world. Organized to allow readers to
examine the historical evolution of U.S. foreign policy, the book
includes treaties, speeches, and other documents that illustrate
important doctrines and decisions over the more than two centuries
of American history, covering all presidential doctrines to the
current administration. It also highlights various phases of
foreign policy, from regionalism to westward expansion, from the
Cold War to a New World Order. In addition to the documents
themselves, the authors provide invaluable analysis and commentary
that will help students understand what the documents mean-both in
the context of their time, and in terms of their broader historical
significance. A comprehensive list of U.S. foreign policy documents
Primary documents such as treaties and speeches with each chapter
Sidebars detailing events during the period under discussion
References, including Internet sites, for each chapter Indexes of
major documents organized under various themes, such as "alliances"
and "arms reduction treaties" A comprehensive list of web-based
resources
This volume presents a kaleidoscopic view of the norms and forms of
contemporary city life, focusing especially on the processes of
social capital (de)formation in the urban milieu. It brings
together studies from highly diverse urban settings, such as
squatter re-settlement projects in Kathmandu, urban funeral
societies in Africa, an HIV/AIDS community in Los Angeles, the poor
of Harare, pensioners in Shanghai, Maori gangs in Auckland, and a
Roma boxing club in Prague, among others. Contributors draw on
contemporary theory and research in social capital, political
economy, urban planning and policy, social movements, civil society
and democracy to explore how social norms, networks, connections
and ties are created, deployed - and often frayed - under
conditions of social complexity, inequality, cultural pluralism,
and the ethno-racial diversity and division characteristic of urban
contexts throughout the world. In this way, the volume engages in a
genuinely globalized - and globalizing - discussion of contemporary
urban social life and stands as a unique and timely
interdisciplinary contribution to the ever-expanding literature
devoted to social capital.
This volume presents a kaleidoscopic view of the norms and forms of
contemporary city life, focusing especially on the processes of
social capital (de)formation in the urban milieu. It brings
together studies from highly diverse urban settings, such as
squatter re-settlement projects in Kathmandu, urban funeral
societies in Africa, an HIV/AIDS community in Los Angeles, the poor
of Harare, pensioners in Shanghai, Maori gangs in Auckland, and a
Roma boxing club in Prague, among others. Contributors draw on
contemporary theory and research in social capital, political
economy, urban planning and policy, social movements, civil society
and democracy to explore how social norms, networks, connections
and ties are created, deployed - and often frayed - under
conditions of social complexity, inequality, cultural pluralism,
and the ethno-racial diversity and division characteristic of urban
contexts throughout the world. In this way, the volume engages in a
genuinely globalized - and globalizing - discussion of contemporary
urban social life and stands as a unique and timely
interdisciplinary contribution to the ever-expanding literature
devoted to social capital.
Notions of justice and community in the United States are
increasingly challenged by trends like immigration,
multiculturalism, and economic inequality as well as historical
legacies like Jim Crow-era racial segregation. These dynamics
continually re-shape the communities in which people live, whether
by generating new forms of interdependency and inequality, creating
new social cleavages or exacerbating existing ones, or generating
new spaces in which cross-boundary contact, conflict, or
cooperation is possible. Revealing the ways in which notions of
justice and community overlap in American politics and public
discourse through concrete political questions which emerge when
considering dimensions of time, place, and difference, Gregory W.
Streich offers a fresh re-examination of the normative ideas of
justice and community. He encourages Americans to move from a view
of justice that applies only to people who are "like us" to a view
of justice that applies to people beyond "just us."
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