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PS-50 International Relations AND Foreign Policy Theories 11-30-09

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International Relations/Foreign Policy Theories Political Science 50 Fall 2009 (e-11-30-09) Converse Hall 308 Pavel Machala/ Clark House 203 pmachala@amherst.edu http://www.amherst.edu/~pmachala/ Advising Hours: Tu 3:30-5:00; F 2:30-4:00 With Jonathan T Chow Five College Fellow Department of Political Science Amherst College Tel.: 413-542-5430 jchow@amherst.edu http://www.jonathanchow.com Advising Hours: by appointment ONLY SYLLABUS AND READING ASSIGNMENTS (1) Syllabus: You can find the electronic version of this syllabus at https://www.amherst.edu/people/facstaff/pmachala (2) Structure: The course is divided into eleven sections Unless otherwise indicated, each section corresponds to one seminar meeting Two sessions have been held in reserve for extending the pursuit of topics as the need arises (3) Course requirements: • Above all, very regular attendance! (Unless you have serious reason, if you miss more than class meetings, your final course grade will be lowered by half a point.) • Read all the assigned literature in advance of each class session • At minimum, you are required to post comments/“letters” to FOUR separate 1|Page Blackboard “Discussion Boards.” (Yes, initially I said “5” and then changed it to “4 and the final agreement were 4” responses.) Each “discussion” corresponds to one class meeting Please submit your comments no later than Monday at 6:00am on the day of the given seminar meeting (Each “letter” should include your name and a title, be only 4-5 pages long, double-spaced, in times new roman 12” font, and saved as an msword attachment.) • A term paper essay of approximately fifteen-twenty pages will be due on Monday, December 21 • Grading policy: Blackboard discussion comments - 20% of the final grade Class participation – 20% Term paper – 60% (4) Materials to be Read: • Throughout the course we will be referring to current events in world politics and American foreign policy Please try to read one major (U.S or non-U.S.) newspaper on a regular (preferably daily) basis • The required readings for this course exist in one of the following three forms: (1) Reserve Desk at Frost Library (2) website and (3) class handouts • In the syllabus, the Reserve Desk readings are indentified as (R) and the website readings as either (W) or (E) • You can access (E) readings by going to our course “e-reserve” at https://www.amherst.edu/people/facstaff/pmachala (use your own Amherst College username and password) • You can access (W) readings by clicking on the specific hyperlinks in the electronic version of the syllabus https://www.amherst.edu/academiclife/departments/courses/0910F/POSC/POSC-500910F (username: student; password: student0910) (5) Frost Reserve Desk: Andrew Bacevich, The Limits of Power Robert Dean, Imperial Brotherhood, Domhoff, G William, C Wright Mills and The Power Elite Stephen Ducat, The Wimp Factor : gender gaps, holy wars, and the politics of anxious 2|Page masculinity, 2004 Leslie H Gelb, Power Rules Jacob Heilbrunn, They Knew They Were Right Valerie M Hudson Foreign Policy Analysis: Classic and Contemporary Theory (Paperback - Oct 28, 2006) Stephen D Krasner, Defending the National Interest Walter Russell Mead, Special Providence John J Mearsheimer and Stephen M Wald, The Israel Lobby and U.S Foreign Policy, C.W Mills, The Power Elite, Laura Neack, The New Foreign Policy (2nd edition) David E Sanger, The Inheritance David Skidmore and Valerie Hudson, The Limits of State Autonomy, JX1391 L495 1993 Kenneth Waltz, Man, the State and War Introduction: The Sources of American Foreign Policy Conduct (Tuesday, September 8) Wallace Shawn, “Foreign Policy Therapist,” Nation, December 3, 2001 (W) Samuel Huntington, “The Lonely Superpower,” Foreign Affairs, March/ April 1999 (W) Thomas Friedman, “It’s A Flat World, After All,” New York Times, April 3, 2005 (W) Walter Russell Mead, “Special Providence,” New York Times, November 25, 2001 (W) Walt, Stephen M "Taming American Power," Foreign Affairs 84 (5) 2005 (W) Moises Naim, “Anti-Americanisms,” Foreign Policy, No 128, 2002 (5pp) (W) Pew Global Survey, American Character Gets Mixed Reviews, (W) BBC Poll http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/shared/spl/hi/programmes/wtwta/poll/html/political/statements.stm Zbigniew Brzezinski, “How Jimmy Carter and I Started the Mujahideen,” http://www.counterpunch.org/brzezinski.html Madeleine Albright, “An Interview with Lesley Stahl – 60 Minutes,” http://home.comcast.net/~dhamre/docAlb.htm Ari Berman, “The Strategic Class,” Nation, August 29, 2005 (W) *** Morton Abramowitz & Leslie H Gelb, In Defense of Striped Pants, National Interest, 3|Page Spring 2005 (W) OPTIONAL James Risen, “Secret History of the CIA in Iran,” New York Times, June 20, 2000 (W) http://www.nytimes.com/library/world/mideast/041600iran-cia-intro.html Susan Paterson, Michael J Tierney, Daniel Maliniak, “Inside the Ivory Tower,” Foreign Policy, 2005 (W) Is America too powerful for its own good? http://observer.guardian.co.uk/worldview/story/0,11581,647755,00.html Mark Fiore, Greater Georgelandia , http://www.sfgate.com/columnists/fiore/ American Foreign Policy Traditions (Monday, September 14) All the readings for this CLASS are at: http://www3.amherst.edu/~pmachala/Current %20Politics/PS-50%20IR%20&%20Foreign%20Policy%20Theory-THE %20READINGS/For%20the%20SECOND%20seminar%20readings/ Walter Russell Mead, “Special Providence,” New York Times, November 25, 2001 (click on the link) (W) OR (E-Reserve) Walter Russell Mead, “American Grand Strategy in a World at Risk,” Orbis, 49(4) 2005 (click on the link) (W) OR (E-Reserve) Walter Russell Mead, “Vindicator Only of Her Own - The Jeffersonian Tradition,” in Mead, Special Providence, ch (click on the link) OR (W) OR (Frost Reserve) OR (E-Reserve) Walter Russell Mead, “The Hamilton Way,” World Policy Journal, fall 1996 [or Mead, Special Providence, ch (click on the link) OR (W) OR (Frost Reserve) OR (E-Reserve) Walter Russell Mead, “The Connecticut Yankee in the Court of King Arthur: Wilsonianism and Its Mission,” in Mead, SPECIAL PROVIDENCE, ch.5 (click on the link) OR (Frost Reserve) OR (E-Reserve) Walter Russell Mead, “The Jacksonian Tradition,” National Interest, winter 1999 [or Mead, Special Providence, ch (click on the link) OR (W) OR Frost Reserve) OR (E-Reserve) Robert Kagan, “Against the Myth of American Innocence, A Cowboy Nation,” The New Republic (click on the link) OR (W) OR (E-Reserve) Walter LaFeber, “Tension Between Democracy and Capitalism During the American Century,” in Hogan, M J E., Ed (1999) The Ambiguous Legacy: U S Foreign Relations in the "American Century" New York, Cambridge University Press (W) 4|Page A Genealogy of Neo-conservatism in American Foreign Policy (September 21) Jacob Heilbrunn, They Knew They Were Right (read all) (R) The End of American Foreign Policy Exceptionalism? (September 28) Andrew Bacevich, The Limits of Power (read all) (R) “Common Sense” Foreign Policy? (October 5) Leslie H Gelb, Power Rules (read all) (R) The Concept of “Inheritance” in Foreign Policy (October 19) David E Sanger, The Inheritance (read all) (R) Optional: Brent Scowcroft, “Don't Attack Saddam,” Wall Street Journal, August 20, 2002 (W) Patrick Tyler, “U.S Strategy Plan Calls for Insuring No Rivals Develop – A One- Superpower World, New York Times, March 8, 1992 (W) Defense Planning Guidance/ excerpt /also known as Pentagon’s Plan to “Prevent the Re-emergence of a New Rival,” New York Times, March 8, 1992 (W) *** U.S - IRAQ ProCon org http://www.usiraqprocon.org/?gclid=CPfVns2Tp4ICFROBGgodxgdyDw Frontline, The War Behind Closed Doors, http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/iraq/view/ International Relations, Foreign Policy and the Levels of Analysis (October 26) Kenneth Waltz, Man, the State and War (real all) (R) 5|Page Foreign Policy Theories (November 2) Andrew Hurrell, “America and the World: Issues in the Teaching of then U.S Foreign Policy,” Perspectives on Politics, 2(10 2004 (W) (E) Laura Neack, The New Foreign Policy (second edition) ;(READ ALL) (R) David Skidmore and Valerie M Hudson, “Establishing the Limits of State Autonomy,” in Skidmore and Hudson, The Limits of State Autonomy, pp 1-15 (15pp) 1993 (W) (R) Optional Valerie M Hudson, with Christopher S Vore, “Foreign Policy Analysis Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow,” (W) Valerie M Hudson Foreign Policy Analysis: Classic and Contemporary Theory (Paperback - Oct 28, 2006) chapter 1: Introduction: The situation and evolution of Foreign Policy Analysis: A Road map (pp.3-26); chapter 2: The Individual Decisionmaker: The Psychology of World Leaders (pp.37-63 (W) (R) Valerie M Hudson, “Culture and Foreign Policy Agenda: Developing a Research Agenda,” in Hudson, Culture and Foreign Policy (pp.1-19) JEAN A GARRISON, ed Foreign Policy Analysis in 20/20: A Symposium, International Studies Review (2003) 5, 155–202 (W) Stephen D Krasner, Defending the National Interest, chapter 1: A Statist Approach to the Study of Foreign Policy (pp.5-34) (W) (R) Graham Allison and Philip Zelikow, Essence of Decision: Explaining the Cuban Missile Crisis, 1999 pp.1-12 (10pp) Elisabeth Drew, “The Enforcer,” New York Review of Books, 50(7) May 1, 2003 (W) Francis Fukuyama, AI SYMPOSIUM: THE SOURCES OF AMERICAN CONDUCT Daniel W Drezner, THE LIMITS OF TRANSFORMATION IN WORLD POLITICS, http://www.danieldrezner.com/research/limits.pdf (W) http://www.poli.duke.edu/resources/workshop/keohane/drezner.pdf (W)!!! Neorealism (November 9) Kenneth Waltz, "The Origins of War in Neorealist Theory" Journal of Interdisciplinary History 18:4 (1988), 615-28 (W) (E) John Mearsheimer, "Why We Will Soon Miss the Cold War" The Atlantic Monthly (Aug 1990) (E) (W) 6|Page Robert Keohane, Chs 4-6 from After Hegemony (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1984) (W) Charles Kindleberger, "An Explanation of the 1929 Depression," from The World in Depression: 1929-1939 (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1973), 291-308; OR “An Explanation of the 1929 Depression," from "The World in Depression: 1929-1939chow"where he writes about the coordination problems that led to "beggar-thy-neighbor" policies (W) (R) Optional E.H Carr, The Twenty Years' Crisis, chapters 3-6-chow, which is about 60 pages (W) (R) Robert Keohane and Joseph Nye "Power and Interdependence in the Information Age" –chow, Foreign Affairs, September/October 1998 (W) (E) 10.Constructivism (November 16) Bull, Hedley The Anarchical Society: A Study of Order in World Politics 2nd ed New York: Columbia University Press, 1977 Read Chapters and and skim chapter (85 pages) (W) (R) Alexander Wendt, "Anarchy Is What States Make of It," International Organization 46, no (1992): 391-425 (34 pages) (W) (E) Price, Richard M., and Nina Tannenwald "Norms and Deterrence: The Nuclear and Chemical Weapons Taboos." In The Culture of National Security, edited by Peter J Katzenstein, 114-52 New York: Columbia University Press, 1996 (38 pages) (W) (E) (R) John S Duffield, "Political Culture and State Behavior: Why Germany Confounds Neorealism," International Organization 53, no (1999): 765-803 (38 pages) (W) (E) Optional John Ruggie (1982) “International Regimes, Transactions and Change: Embedded Liberalism in the Postwar Economic Order", International Organization 36:2 (Spring 1982), 379-415 (W) (E) 11 C Wright Mills AND “The Power Elite” (November 30) 7|Page C.W Mills, The Power Elite, chs.1 and 12 (ch – part one only; ch.12- entire) (W) (R) Eisenhower’s Farewell Address to the Nation http://mcadams.posc.mu.edu/ike.htm ideo results for Eisenhower’s Farewell Address to the Nation (E) Samuel Huntington, Dead souls: the denationalization of the American elite, National Interest, spring 2004 (W) (E) *** William I Robinson, Global Capitalism: The New Transnationalism and the Folly of Conventional Thinking, Science and Society, Volume 63: Issue 3, 2005 (W) (E) *** Doug Stokes, The Heart of Empire? Theorizing US Empire in an Era of Transnational Capitalism, Third World Quarterly, Volume 26: Issue 2, 2005 (W) (E) ** OPTIONAL C Wright Mills, The Higher Circles, (W) Domhoff, G William., C Wright Mills and The power elite, compiled by G William Domhoff and Hoyt B Ballard.Boston : Beacon Press, [1968] (3 copies at AC including the one I have at home) (All other colleges have one each ; Umass has 2) (R) Alan Wolfe, The Power Elite Now, November 30, 2002 http://www.prospect.org/cs/articles? article=the_power_elite_now (W) Christopher Bollyn, War Is Sell - Washington's Power Elite Are the Beneficiaries of War http://prisonplanet.com/washingtons_power_elite_are_the_beneficiaries_of_war.html (W) Brian Whitmore, Inside The Corporation: Russia's Power Elite http://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/library/news/russia/2007/russia-071015-rferl03.htm (W) Richard Breen and David B Rottman, Is the National State the Appropriate Geographical Unit for Class Analysis? http://soc.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/32/1/1 (W) William G Domhoff, Who Rules America? Power and Politics in the year 2000 3rd edition, pp.1-16 G William Domhoff, C Wright Mills, Power Structure Research, and the Failures of Mainstream Political Science, (W)(E) FELICIA R LEE, Does Class Count in Today's Land of Opportunity? NYT, January 18, 2003 http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html? res=940CE5D91630F93BA25752C0A9659C8B63&sec=&spon=&pagewanted=print (W) Michael Zweig, Six Points on Class http://www.monthlyreview.org/0706zweig.htm (W) John Bellamy Foster, Aspects of Class in the United States: An Introduction http://www.monthlyreview.org/0706jbf.htm (W) William K Tabb, The Power of the Rich, http://www.monthlyreview.org/0706tabb.htm (W) Stephanie Luce and Mark Brenner, Women and Class: What Has Happened in Forty Years? http://www.monthlyreview.org/0706lucebrenner.htm (W) 8|Page Murray N Rothbard, “Wall Street, Banks, and American Foreign Policy” (W) (M) **** Richard J Barnet, Roots of War The Men and Institutions behind U.S Foreign Policy, pp.137-175 (M) Reinhold Nieburhr, The Irony of American History, ch.6 (“The International Class Struggle”) / Frost copy at home! The Theory of Elites and the Circulation of Elites, From Coser, 1977:396-400, http://www2.pfeiffer.edu/~lridener/DSS/Pareto/PARETOW7.HTML The Power Elite Presentation http://www.faculty.rsu.edu/ %7Efelwell/Theorists/Four/Presentations/MILLS/MILLS.PPT#259,33 12 The Term Papers Individual Consultations Sign-up Sheet Friday, December 1:40-2:00 2:00-2:20 2:20-2:40 2:40-3:00 3:00-3:20 Monday, December 10:00 -10:20 10:20-10:40 10:40-noon 9|Page 1:20-1:40 1:40-2:00 2:00-2:20 2:40-3:00 3:00-3:20 3:20-3:40 3:40-4:00 4:00-4:20 Monday, December 14 2:00-2:20 2:40-3:00 3:00-3:20 3:20-3:40 3:40-4:00 Some “Other” Possible Topics Mass Media Michael Massing, “Now They Tell Us,” New York Review of Books, 51(3) February 26, 2004 (W) Michael Massing, “The Press: The Enemy Within,” New York Review of Books, 52(2) 2005 (W) * 10 | P a g e Edward S Herman and Noam Chomsky, Manufacturing Consent: The Political Economy of the Mass Media, 1988 ch.1 (M) **** Sut Jhally, Justin Lewis, Edward S Herman, Noam Chomsky and Media Education Foundation., The myth of the liberal media the propaganda model of news, 1997 VIDEO/ Frost Library’s Media Center WEBSITES (optional) Who Owns What http://www.cjr.org/tools/owners/ Committee to Protect Journalists http://www.cpj.org/ Public Opinion Earl C Ravenal, ”IGNORANT ARMIES: THE STATE, THE PUBLIC, AND THE MAKING OF FOREIGN POLICY,” Critical Review 14 nos 2-3, 2000 READ only pp.327-340 (W) ** Justin Lewis, Constructing Public Opinion, pp 129-137 pp.138-166 (35pp) (M) **** John Rielly, AAmericans and the World: A Survey at Century's End,@ Foreign Policy, spring 1999 (15pp) (W) Stephen Kull, Voice of Superpower, Foreign Policy, May/June 2004 (W)* Daniel Yankelovich, “Poll Positions: What Americans Really Think About U.S Foreign Policy, “ Foreign Affairs 84.5 (Sept-Oct 2005) (W) Richard Sobel, The Impact of Public Opinion on U.S Foreign Policy, ch (M) *** OPTIONAL Entman, Robert M Projections of Power: Framing News, Public Opinion, and U.S Foreign Policy Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2004 WEBSITES (optional) Program on International Policy Attitudes http://www.pipa.org/ American Journalism Review http://www.ajr.org/index.asp “American Public Opinion and Foreign Policy,” the US Report for 2004 http://www.ccfr.org/globalviews2004/sub/usa.htm SOVEREIGNTY Eric Leonard, “Seeking Sovereignty: Gaining Understanding through Critical Analysis,” New Political Science, 23 (3) 2001 (W) Adriana Sinclair and Michael Byers, “When US Scholars Speak of ‘Sovereignty’,What Do They Mean?,” Political Studies, Vol 55, 2007 (W) Statehood and Sovereignty http://www.globalpolicy.org/nations/index.htm 11 | P a g e Maria Gritsch, The Nation-State and Economic Globalization: Soft Geo-Politics and Increased State Autonomy? Review of International Political Economy, 12:1 February 2005: pp 1–25 (W) Privatization and Military Outsourcing Esther Pan: IRAQ: Military Outsourcing http://www.cfr.org/publication/7667/#1 P.W Singer, Corporate Warriors Torture and Foreign Policy Christopher H Pyle, Getting Away with Torture (read all) Manliness and Foreign Policy (November 30) Stephen Ducat, The wimp factor : gender gaps, holy wars, and the politics of anxious masculinity, 2004 pp.1-23 and 84-114 and 150-167 (60pp) (R)** Robert Dean, Imperial Brotherhood, pp 1-7, 17-35 (25pp) (R)*** Norman Mailer, “White Men Unburdened,” New York Review of Books 2003 (5pp) (W) (M) *** Ronal Tiersky, Response to Mailer + Mailer’s Response to Tiersky Cynthia Enloe, “Masculinity as Foreign Policy Issue,” Foreign Policy in Focus, October 2000 (W) David Rothkopf, "Hillary Clinton's foreign policy revolution well underway," Washington Post, August 24, 2009 http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/08/21/AR2009082101772.html James Joyner, Hillary Clinton's Quiet Revolution? August 24, 2009 http://www.acus.org/new_atlanticist/hillary-clintons-quiet-revolution OPTIONAL MAUREEN DOWD, “All the President's Women,” New York Times, October 5, 2005 (W) Tina Brown, "Obama's Other Wife" http://www.thedailybeast.com/blogs-and-stories/2009-07-13/obamas-otherwife-1/ Some General Websites Presidents http://www.ipl.org/div/potus/ Presidents http://odur.let.rug.nl/~usa/P/index.htm The White House Website http://www.whitehouse.gov/history/presidents/ The White House http://www.whitehouse.gov/ 12 | P a g e National Security Council http://www.whitehouse.gov/nsc/ National Security Agency http://www.nsa.gov/ FBI http://www.fbi.gov/ CIA http://www.odci.gov/ Pentagon http://www.defenselink.mil/ The National Security Archives http://www.gwu.edu/%7Ensarchiv/ House Committee on International Relations http://wwwc.house.gov/international_relations/ Middle East Research and Information Project http://www.merip.org/new_war_resources/new_war_links.html Middle East http://www.theglobalsite.ac.uk/middleeast/ Institute for Policy Study http://ips-dc.org/ Right Web; Tracking militarists’ efforts to influence U.S foreign policy http://rightweb.irconline.org/charts/fpteam.php New Random Articles for Next Time I teach PS-50 Robert D Putnam, Diplomacy and Domestic Politics: The Logic of Two-Level Games International Organization, Vol 42, No (Summer, 1988), pp 427-460 http://hpeb08.files.wordpress.com/2008/08/putnam.pdf C Domestic Causes of Foreign Policy (Feb 25) (FROM: http://ggallarotti.web.wesleyan.edu/wescourses/2002f/govt155/01/pages/Syllabus/syllabusconten t.htm C Domestic Causes of Foreign Policy (Feb 25) Useful links for this topic: http://www.people.fas.harvard.edu/~johnston/GOV2880/fearon.pdf http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/foreign/dcore.htm Reading: Russett, Starr, Kinsella, World Politics, Chapter Woodrow Wilson, excerpts from Public Papers, in Wolfers and Martin, Anglo-American Tradition in Foreign Affairs (look under Wilson "Excerpts" in Reserve Room) Art and Jervis, International Politics, pp 95-107 Discussion Questions: Woodrow Wilson, former teacher and football coach at Wesleyan University, argued that a democratic world (i.e., where all nations are governed by democratic principles) was a safe world Michael Doyle has recently restated the argument in terms of the passivity of liberal states What is the logic of their argument? What are the strengths and weaknesses? Consider the evidence too (pay attention to Doyle's use of the evidence) In 13 | P a g e democracies, popular views are supposedly the primary shapers of foreign policy Is this true of the U.S.? Does the U.S have a truly democratic foreign policy? D Bureaucratic Politics (Feb 27) Useful links for this topic: http://www.cda-cdai.ca/symposia/2000/hataley.htm http://www.wws.princeton.edu/~jpia/12.html Reading: Morton Halperin and Arnold Kanter, "The Bureaucratic Perspective" Russett, Starr, Kinsella, World Politics, pgs 171-178 James Thompson, "How Could Vietnam Happen?" (look under Halperin and Kanter in Reserve) Discussion Questions: What are the main principles of the bureaucratic politics approach to explaining foreign policy as described by Arnold Kanter and Morton Halperin? How these principles explain the Vietnam War? What are Robert Art's main critiques of the BP approach to foreign policy? E Decision Making and Psychological Sources of Foreign Policy Psychological Theories of Foreign Policy (Mar 1) Reading: Robert Jervis, "Hypotheses on Misperception" Russett, Starr, Kinsella, World Politics, Chapter Discussion Questions: The decision-making level of analysis explains foreign policy by looking at the belief systems and thought processes of leaders Hence, it proposes that we learn abut foreign policy through a familiarity with the psychology of leaders What are the principal psychological processes that affect foreign policy decisions? Psychological Sources and the Cuban Missile Crisis (Marc 3) Robert Kennedy, Thirteen Days Discussion Questions: Which of these psychological processes were especially visible and important in the Cuban Missile Crisis case? MIDTERM DUE March F Levels of Analysis and the Decision to Drop the A-Bomb 14 | P a g e Useful links for this topic: http://www.dannen.com/decision/ http://www.ohiou.edu/perspectives/9701/bomb2.htm Mar 5: The class will watch the documentary "The Decision to Drop the Bomb." The film analyzes the formative events which led to Truman's decision to use the atomic bomb While watching the film, think about which levels of analysis best explain Truman's decision Mar 22: Discussion of the decision to drop the bomb and levels of analysis Links on the Decision to drop the A Bomb Useful links for this topic: http://www.people.fas.harvard.edu/~johnston/GOV2880/fearon.pdf http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/foreign/dcore.htm 15 | P a g e ... http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/iraq/view/ International Relations, Foreign Policy and the Levels of Analysis (October 26) Kenneth Waltz, Man, the State and War (real all) (R) 5|Page Foreign Policy Theories (November 2) Andrew... Mearsheimer and Stephen M Wald, The Israel Lobby and U.S Foreign Policy, C.W Mills, The Power Elite, Laura Neack, The New Foreign Policy (2nd edition) David E Sanger, The Inheritance David Skidmore and. .. “Culture and Foreign Policy Agenda: Developing a Research Agenda,” in Hudson, Culture and Foreign Policy (pp.1-19) JEAN A GARRISON, ed Foreign Policy Analysis in 20/20: A Symposium, International Studies

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    SYLLABUS AND READING ASSIGNMENTS

    1. Introduction: The Sources of American Foreign Policy Conduct (Tuesday, September 8)

    Morton Abramowitz & Leslie H. Gelb, In Defense of Striped Pants, National Interest, Spring 2005 (W)

    2. American Foreign Policy Traditions (Monday, September 14)

    3. A Genealogy of Neo-conservatism in American Foreign Policy (September 21)

    Jacob Heilbrunn, They Knew They Were Right (read all) (R)

    4. The End of American Foreign Policy Exceptionalism? (September 28)

    Andrew Bacevich, The Limits of Power (read all) (R)

    5. “Common Sense” Foreign Policy? (October 5)

    Leslie H. Gelb, Power Rules (read all) (R)

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