The Four Ages of American Foreign Policy: Weak Power, Great Power, Superpower, Hyperpower
Autor Michael Mandelbaumen Limba Engleză Paperback – 30 apr 2024
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780197746929
ISBN-10: 0197746926
Pagini: 632
Dimensiuni: 152 x 226 x 64 mm
Greutate: 0.82 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0197746926
Pagini: 632
Dimensiuni: 152 x 226 x 64 mm
Greutate: 0.82 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Notă biografică
Michael Mandelbaum is the Christian A. Herter Professor Emeritus of American Foreign Policy at The Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies. He is the author of sixteen previous books, including Mission Failure (Oxford, 2016) The Rise and Fall of Peace on Earth (Oxford, 2019), and, with Thomas L. Friedman, That Used to Be Us (2011).
Recenzii
Mandelbaum has written a masterful interpretation of the twists and turns of U.S. foreign policy, offering keen insights into U.S. politics and the nature of global affairs along the way. The book will take its place alongside other seminal studies of the history of U.S. statecraft.
Where Mandelbaum breaks new ground is when he discusses and assesses the serial failures of Presidents Clinton through Obama in post-Cold War geopolitics. This alone is worth the price of the book.
Mandelbaum [...] has written a book so lucid on a subject so sprawling that it could be read with profit by someone only mildly curious about America's foreign entanglements and yet also be a source of inspiration to anyone steeped in the arcana of world affairs.
The Four Ages of American Foreign Policy provides a masterly conceptual framework for coming to grips with past U.S. foreign policy.
Michael Mandelbaum's new book is a masterpiece. I am often asked what is the best single book to read to understand the grand sweep and history of American foreign policy, and I will now say that it is this book. Mandelbaum uniquely combines the depth and knowledge of the best historians and the breadth and imagination of the best political scientists. His organizing paradigm of the great ascent of America through its four successive ages of increasing power—coming at the end of that ascent and at the beginning of a new age of diminished power—should be fundamental and invaluable to future scholars, policy analysts, and concerned citizens.
The Four Ages of American Foreign Policy is a masterwork—a defining contribution to the most critical international debate of our time. It is essential for anyone concerned about world affairs. Mandelbäum's analysis contains unique perspectives and new insights for understanding America's role in today's turbulent era. A profound searchlight on the past and a guidepost for the future, it combines rare scholarship with lucid relevance. Vital for both general readers and professionals.
The Four Ages of American Foreign Policy is a sweeping account of America's place in the world. Elegantly written, it is an invaluable addition to the scholarship on the United States.
In this accessible and readable account of the broad sweep of US foreign policy, Mandelbaum explores a paradoxical question: why, as American power has increased over the centuries, has the United States ultimately become less able to achieve its foreign policy goals? Sure to provoke spirited debate, his answers to this critical question will interest specialists and the general reader alike.
In this imaginative book, Michael Mandelbaum brings his formidable energy and talents to bear on the history of American foreign policy. An incisive volume well worth reading and pondering.
Mandelbaum has written probably the best and the most comprehensive study ever published on American foreign policy. [...] a truly superb synthesis of both theory and history… With this magisterial volume, Mandelbaum's greatest contribution is the placement of many dramatic and significant historical and contemporary events within a theoretical and historical context. [...] The systematic analysis of such a long period in the history of American foreign policy yields new and compelling perspectives on events, peoples, and processes.
Where Mandelbaum breaks new ground is when he discusses and assesses the serial failures of Presidents Clinton through Obama in post-Cold War geopolitics. This alone is worth the price of the book.
Mandelbaum [...] has written a book so lucid on a subject so sprawling that it could be read with profit by someone only mildly curious about America's foreign entanglements and yet also be a source of inspiration to anyone steeped in the arcana of world affairs.
The Four Ages of American Foreign Policy provides a masterly conceptual framework for coming to grips with past U.S. foreign policy.
Michael Mandelbaum's new book is a masterpiece. I am often asked what is the best single book to read to understand the grand sweep and history of American foreign policy, and I will now say that it is this book. Mandelbaum uniquely combines the depth and knowledge of the best historians and the breadth and imagination of the best political scientists. His organizing paradigm of the great ascent of America through its four successive ages of increasing power—coming at the end of that ascent and at the beginning of a new age of diminished power—should be fundamental and invaluable to future scholars, policy analysts, and concerned citizens.
The Four Ages of American Foreign Policy is a masterwork—a defining contribution to the most critical international debate of our time. It is essential for anyone concerned about world affairs. Mandelbäum's analysis contains unique perspectives and new insights for understanding America's role in today's turbulent era. A profound searchlight on the past and a guidepost for the future, it combines rare scholarship with lucid relevance. Vital for both general readers and professionals.
The Four Ages of American Foreign Policy is a sweeping account of America's place in the world. Elegantly written, it is an invaluable addition to the scholarship on the United States.
In this accessible and readable account of the broad sweep of US foreign policy, Mandelbaum explores a paradoxical question: why, as American power has increased over the centuries, has the United States ultimately become less able to achieve its foreign policy goals? Sure to provoke spirited debate, his answers to this critical question will interest specialists and the general reader alike.
In this imaginative book, Michael Mandelbaum brings his formidable energy and talents to bear on the history of American foreign policy. An incisive volume well worth reading and pondering.
Mandelbaum has written probably the best and the most comprehensive study ever published on American foreign policy. [...] a truly superb synthesis of both theory and history… With this magisterial volume, Mandelbaum's greatest contribution is the placement of many dramatic and significant historical and contemporary events within a theoretical and historical context. [...] The systematic analysis of such a long period in the history of American foreign policy yields new and compelling perspectives on events, peoples, and processes.