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The Politics of United States Foreign Policy. Politics and national interest Politics: Who gets what, when and how Competition for power and shared meaning.

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Presentation on theme: "The Politics of United States Foreign Policy. Politics and national interest Politics: Who gets what, when and how Competition for power and shared meaning."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Politics of United States Foreign Policy

2 Politics and national interest Politics: Who gets what, when and how Competition for power and shared meaning Competition between different individuals and groups for control of government, and for support of the public and influence throughout society, in order to promote certain ends National interest: Riason d'état. The goals of politics; what is most beneficial for the state

3 What is Foreign Policy? Foreign policy/foreign relations: …the scope of state involvement abroad and the collection of goals, strategies, and instruments that are selected by governmental policymakers The foreign policy process: How policy decisions are formed, put on the agenda and implemented

4 The Foreign Policy Process What forces drive foreign policy? Political/ideological, moral, economic… What actors contribute to foreign policy formulation? The president, Congress, the foreign policy bureaucracy Advisors, cabinet officials, political parties, courts, etc.

5 Why we study foreign policy History Relevance: obvious effects Security, economy often overlooked effects Environment, global health initiatives

6 How we study foreign policy: three levels of analysis The historical and global power context The government and policymaking process Society and domestic politics

7 How do scholars typically look at foreign policy? The policy approach Emphasize contemporary events. Policy-prescriptive scholarship. The historical approach Emphasize historical patterns. Narrative rather than prescriptive scholarship. The social-science approach Identify patterns in specific facets of policy. Theory-developmental scholarship.

8 How we study foreign policy: Three central themes Presidential supremacy in foreign policy – A modern role, often challenged – three patterns over time Cold War peak post-Vietnam decline post-Cold-War tenuous increase Patterns of continuity and change in U.S. foreign policy – Post-WWII dominance/global presence, Post-Vietnam transitions (decline of presidential power, fall of anti-communist consensus, IPE considerations) Conflicting tension between democracy and security – Individual rights (transparency, dialogue) versus national security (secrecy, mass support, efficiency)


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