The American Way of Foreign Policy
Ideology, Economics, and Democracy
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press Inc
Publishing:15th Jul '26
£22.99
This title is due to be published on 15th July, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

What is distinctively American about American foreign policy? An eminent foreign relations scholar explores this question and its implications. What is distinctively American about American foreign policy? The American Way of Foreign Policy answers that question by identifying three features of the nation's relations with other countries and tracing their impact from the eighteenth century to the twenty-first. First, from its beginnings the United States has conducted an unusually ideological foreign policy in comparison with the foreign policies of other countries. It has tried, in different ways over the years, to promote the political ideas - individual rights, political democracy, and international peace - that have played a dominant role in America's domestic politics. Second, while most countries have used political instruments to win economic benefits - the great empires that European countries conquered and then exploited over the centuries are examples - the United States has reversed this pattern. It has regularly adopted economic policies, particularly sanctions, to pursue its political goals abroad. Third, the United States has conducted an unusually democratic foreign policy in that the American public has had much more influence over its government's activities abroad than the publics in other countries. As the book shows, public opinion has had a particularly powerful impact on questions of war and peace, at some times pushing the nation into armed conflict but at others forcing an end to it. Concisely and clearly written for the general reader, The American Way of Foreign Policy explores the origins of these three enduring features of the nation's foreign relations, shows how they have made themselves felt from the founding of the republic to the present day, and assesses their contributions to the successes and failures of what the United States has accomplished abroad. It provides readers with a new understanding of how and why America has conducted its relations with the world over 250 years.
The American Way of Foreign Policy is an uncommonly elegant, accessible, up-to-date restatement of the traditional argument that US foreign policy is exceptionally liberal. It reflects the study and reflection of a lifetime, and I think it may become a classic. * Colin Dueck, George Mason University *
This book should strongly appeal to a wider public seeking to understand America's place in the world at a time of considerable international turmoil. At the same time, I think it should find a welcome place in college and university courses on American Foreign Policy and international affairs. * Robert J. Lieber, Professor Emeritus of Government and International Affairs, Georgetown University *
ISBN: 9780197840931
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
176 pages