The defeat of Donald Trump in November 2020 followed by the attack on the US Congress on 6th January 2021 represented a tipping point moment in the history of the American republic. Divided at home and facing a world sceptical of American claims to be the ‘indispensable nation’ in world politics, it is clear that the next few years will be decisive ones for the United States. But how did the US, which was riding high only 30 years ago, arrive at this critical point? And will it lead to the fall of what many would claim has been one of the most successful empires of modern times?
In this volume, Michael Cox, a leading scholar of American foreign policy, outlines the ways in which five very different American Presidents – Clinton, Bush, Obama, Trump and now Biden – have addressed the complex legacies left them by their predecessors while dealing with the longer-term problems of running an empire under increasing stress. In so doing, he sets out a framework for thinking critically about US foreign policy since the end of the Cold War without ever losing sight of the biggest question of all: can America continue to shape world affairs or is it now facing long-term decline?
Mục lục
Introduction: The Rise of an Empire
Part I – Clinton: Liberal Leviathan
1. From Geopolitics to Geo-Economics
2. The Wilsonian Moment? Promoting Democracy
3. Failed Crusade? The United States and Post-Communist Russia
Part II – Bush Jnr: Empire in an Age of Terror
4. American Power after the Towers
5. Empire, Imperialism and the Bush Doctrine
Part III – Obama: Towards a Post-American World?
6. Navigating the Rapids
7. Stresses across the Atlantic
8. Axis of Opposition: China, Russia and the West
Part IV – Trump: Turbulence in the Age of Populism
9. Populism, Trump and the Crisis of Globalization
10. Trump’s World: The Legacy
Part V – Biden: Is America Back?
11. After the Deluge or Whither the Empire?
Giới thiệu về tác giả
Michael Cox is Emeritus Professor of International Relations at the London School of Economics (LSE) and Founding Director of LSE IDEAS. He is an associate Fellow in the US and Americas Programme at Chatham House where he established their original United States Discussion Group, is a member of the Scholarly Advisory Board of the Gilder Lehrman Institute for American History in New York, and writes regularly for the US-based H-Diplo network. His most recent books include The Post-Cold War World (2018), a new edition of J. M. Keynes’s The Economic Consequences of the Peace (2019), and a new volume of E.H. Carr’s Nationalism and After (2021).