Myths, Models, and U.S. Foreign PolicyIn what ways does national culture influence the direction of US foreign policy? This study analyzes how certain cultural elements influenced the policy preferences and policymaking behaviours of three Cold War-era statesmen - John Foster Dulles, Averell Harriman and Robert McNamara. |
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Contents
Myths and Representative Characters in U S Culture | 13 |
The Cold War Evangelism of John Foster Dulles | 51 |
Born in the Shadow of the Little Giant | 93 |
Cold War Manager | 145 |
Assessing the Cultural Shaping Process | 187 |
197 | |
203 | |
Common terms and phrases
Abramson Alasdair MacIntyre American approach argued Averell Harriman began belief Bellah bombing cable chronological file city-on-the-hill myth Cold War Cold War worldview communist consistent diplomacy diplomatic Dulles Papers/Princeton Dulles's Durkheim early economic Eisenhower Émile Durkheim entrepreneur forces Geneva conference Harriman memorandum HPLC Ibid identity imagery important individual influence John Foster Dulles Johnson Kennedy Laos leaders MacIntyre market myth McNamara meaning meeting ment missile mission mode of social Molotov moral law moral principles Moscow National Security negotiations North Vietnamese nuclear paradigmatic mode Pathet Lao pattern Peace Pentagon policy preferences policymaking behavior postwar pragmatic myth preferences and policymaking president Press Puritan Puritan representative character religious Robert Bellah role conceptions Roosevelt secretary Shapley social action South Vietnam speech spiritual Stalin statistical control strategy symbolic structures tion U.S. foreign policy U.S. military U.S. society United Viet Vietcong W. A. Harriman Washington world politics York
References to this book
Introduction to International Relations: Theories and Approaches Robert H. Jackson,Georg Sørensen No preview available - 2007 |
American Policy and Northern Ireland: A Saga of Peacebuilding Joseph E. Thompson No preview available - 2001 |