America and the World: The Double Bind

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A01=Kevin P. Clements
ABM
ABM Treaty
administration
Ali Muhamad
Audrey E. Kitagawa
Author_Kevin P. Clements
Beverly Ann Deepe Keever
bush
Bush Doctrine
Category=JPS
CIA
Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty
counterterrorism policy analysis
court
criminal
Dalai
Dalai Lama
David Krieger
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Falk Richard
Follow
global governance challenges
Groff Linda
Hold
Human Rights
human rights frameworks
Ibrahim G. Aoude
international
International Criminal Court
International Monetary Fund
international relations theory
Jeffrey F. Addicott
Kathy E. Ferguson
Kent George
Kevin P. Clements
laden
Majid Tehranian
Mary Ann Wright
Muslim World
NAFTA
National Security Strategy
Nuclear Disarmament
nuclear nonproliferation debates
Nuclear Weapons
Paupp Terrence Edward
peace
Phyllis Turnbull
policy
Preamble
Richard T. Arndt
Robust Nuclear Earth Penetrator
Simai Mihaly
Singh Bilveer
Smooth
states
Terrorist Groups
Tom Coffman
UN
unilateralism multilateralism
united
United States
US
US foreign policy contradictions
Violate
Youngs Gillian
Zunes Stephen

Product details

  • ISBN 9781412804608
  • Weight: 272g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 31 Mar 2005
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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As the world's first democracy with a written constitution and Bill of Rights, the United States has stood for global aspirations toward democratic liberty, equality, and solidarity since its formation in 1776. However, as it developed into an empire by the late nineteenth century, the United States also has threatened the liberties of other peoples, including Native Americans, Hawaiians, Latin Americans, Asians, and Africans. The American role in world affairs has long been polarized around two conflicting images and strategies. In the name of counter-terrorism, the Bush administration pursued a largely unilateralist policy in the Middle East and elsewhere. Yet, in the name of protecting its national sovereignty, the United States also has rejected most of the recent multilateral treaties that strive to contain violence by fortifying the rule of international law. A unilateralist strategy also goes largely against the U.S. postwar multilateralism, which established the United Nations and its specialized agencies. This volume explores these contradictions. Contributors include: Kevin P. Clements, Tom Coffman, Audrey Kitagawa, Jeffrey F. Addicott, Steven Zunes, Vivien Stewart, Kathy Ferguson, Phyllis Turnbull, Bilveer Singh, Ibrahim G. Aoude, Richard Falk, Ann Wright, Beverley Kleever, Linda Groff, George Kent, Majid Tehranian, Mohammad Ali, Terrence Paupp, Gillian Young, Mihay Simaii, and David Krieger. The annual publication Peace & Policy, sponsored by the Toda Institute for Global Peace and Policy Research, is now in its ninth year. It is dedicated to providing a forum for the discussion of all issues concerning peace, policy, and the rights and responsibilities of global citizenship. This latest volume fulfills that commitment.