17.40 American Foreign Policy: Past, Present, and Future, Fall 2002
Author(s)
Van Evera, Stephen
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Alternative title
American Foreign Policy: Past, Present, and Future
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Course mission: to explain and evaluate past and present United States foreign policies. What caused the United States' past involvement in foreign wars and interventions? Were the results of U.S. policies good or bad? Would other policies have better served the U.S. and/or the wider world? Were the beliefs that guided U.S. policy true or false? If false, what explains these misperceptions? General theories that bear on the causes and consequences of American policy will be applied to explain and evaluate past and present policies. The history of United States foreign policy in the 20th century is covered in detail. Functional topics are also covered: U.S. military policy, U.S. foreign economic policy, and U.S. policy on human rights and democracy overseas. Finally, we will predict and prescribe for the future. What policies should the U.S. adopt toward current problems and crises? These problems include the war against Al Qaeda and the wider war on terror; Iraq and Saddam Hussein; the Taiwan Straits; the Central African conflicts; and more. What should be the U.S. stance on global environmental and human rights questions?
Date issued
2002-12Other identifiers
17.40-Fall2002
local: 17.40
local: IMSCP-MD5-4a6f6e71bbc836ea860695ed94561edf
Keywords
American Foreign Policy, wars, interventions, Cold War, Korean War, Vietnam war, Cuban missile crisis, CIA, Iran, Guatemala, Iraq, Afghanistan, China, human rights, environment, foreign economic policy, military policy, United States -- Foreign relations