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Tax-exempt? | From Superpower to Besieged Global Power Restoring World Order after the Failure of the Bush Doctrine Leading scholars and policy analysts from nine countries assess the impact of the Bush Doctrine on world order, explain how the United States reached its current low standing internationally, and propose ways that the country can repair the untold damage wrought by ill-conceived and incompetently executed security and foreign policies. Contributors focus on the principal regions of the world where they have expertise: Asia, Europe, Africa, the Middle East, Latin America, and Russia. The contributors agree that future security and foreign policies must be informed by the limitations of U.S. economic, cultural, and military power to shape world order to reflect American interests and values. American power and influence will increase only when the United States binds itself to moral norms, legal strictures, and political accords in cooperation with other like-minded states and peoples. ContributorsBadredine ArfiGülnur AybetDavis B. BobrowAmit Das GuptaKevin C. DunnJacob EnglishTrine FlockhartMaria Raquel FreireMonica HirstRoger E. KanetRemonda B. KleinbergEdward A. KolodziejLi MingjiangJoseph Chinyong LiowPatrick M. MorganSee Seng Tan Edward A. Kolodziej is Research Professor of Political Science (Emeritus) and Director of the Center for Global Studies at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. Roger E. Kanet is Professor of International Studies at the University of Miami. They have coedited several collections, including The Cold War as Cooperation and Coping with Conflict after the Cold War. May 2008 ISBN 0820330744 paper • $24.95 ISBN 0820329770 cloth • $69.95440 pp. • 6 1/8 x 9 1/4 in. • 2 tables • 1 figureA volume in the seriesStudies in Security and International Affairs "This book comes at the right time, systematically dismantling a myth on which U.S. foreign policies have been based since the end of the cold war. The contributors offer in-depth analysis of the constraints for U.S. control over power projection to all relevant regions of the world. The collection rightly widens the definition of global power by one criterion that has become critical-the soft power of cultural and ideational impact used to shape the thinking and behavior of others. This clearly is the battlefield on which the United States lost most." I. William Zartman, Jacob Blaustein Distinguished Professor of International Organization and Conflict Resolution, School of Advanced International Studies, The Johns Hopkins University |
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