American Foreign Policy and The Politics of Fear

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administration
Authority Advantage
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elite persuasion
Endowment Effect
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inflation
international relations theory
Iraq War Resolution
Iraqi WMD
Loss Aversion
media framing
Militarized Political Culture
National Security Strategy
perception
political psychology
preventive
Preventive Attack
Preventive War
psychological mechanisms of threat inflation
public opinion manipulation
Rhetorical Coercion
Risk Entrepreneurs
Robust Marketplace
Secretary Of State
security studies
september
September 11
Shared Identity
states
Terrorism Industry
threat
Threat Inflation
Threat Perception
UN
united
United States
USA Today
war
War Powers Resolution
Western 2005a
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Product details

  • ISBN 9780415777698
  • Weight: 404g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 28 Apr 2009
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This edited volume addresses the issue of threat inflation in American foreign policy and domestic politics. The Bush administration's aggressive campaign to build public support for an invasion of Iraq reheated fears about the president's ability to manipulate the public, and many charged the administration with 'threat inflation', duping the news media and misleading the public into supporting the war under false pretences.

Presenting the latest research, these essays seek to answer the question of why threat inflation occurs and when it will be successful. Simply defined, it is the effort by elites to create concern for a threat that goes beyond the scope and urgency that disinterested analysis would justify. More broadly, the process concerns how elites view threats, the political uses of threat inflation, the politics of threat framing among competing elites, and how the public interprets and perceives threats via the news media.

The war with Iraq gets special attention in this volume, along with the 'War on Terror'. Although many believe that the Bush administration successfully inflated the Iraq threat, there is not a neat consensus about why this was successful. Through both theoretical contributions and case studies, this book showcases the four major explanations of threat inflation -- realism, domestic politics, psychology, and constructivism -- and makes them confront one another directly. The result is a richer appreciation of this important dynamic in US politics and foreign policy, present and future.

This book will be of much interests to students of US foreign and national security policy, international security, strategic studies and IR in general.

Trevor Thrall is Assistant Professor of Political Science and directs the Master of Public Policy program at the University of Michigan - Dearborn. Jane Kellett Cramer is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at the University of Oregon.

Trevor Thrall is Assistant Professor of Political Science and directs the Master of Public Policy program at the University of Michigan-Dearborn.

Jane Kellett Cramer is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at the University of Oregon.