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Title Rethinking American grand strategy / edited by Elizabeth Borgwardt, Christopher McKnight Nichols, and Andrew Preston
Published New York, NY : Oxford University Press, [2021]
©2021

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Description 1 online resource (xv, 483 pages)
Contents Introduction / Christopher McKnight Nichols and Andrew Preston -- Getting grand strategy right : clearing away common fallacies in the grand strategy debate / Hal Brands -- The blob and the mob : on grand strategy and social change / Beverly Gage -- Turning the tide : the application of grand strategy to global health / Elizabeth H. Bradley and Lauren A. Taylor -- Extending the sphere : a Federalist grand strategy / Charles Edel -- Grand strategy of the master class : slavery and foreign policy from the antebellum era to the Civil War / Matthew Karp -- A useful category of analysis? Grand strategy and US foreign relations from the Civil War through World War I / Katherine Epstein -- Grand strategies (or ascendant ideas) since 1919 / David Milne -- Woodrow Wilson, W.E.B. Du Bois, and beyond : American internationalists and the crucible of World War I / Christopher McKnight Nichols -- Franklin Roosevelt, the New Deal, and grand strategy : constructing the postwar order / Elizabeth Borgwardt -- Foreign policy begins at home : Americans, grand strategy, and World War II / Michaela Hoenicke Moore -- National security as grand strategy : Edward Mead Earle and the burdens of world power / Andrew Preston -- The misanthropy diaries : containment, democracy, and the prejudices of George Frost Kennan / David Greenberg -- Implementing grand strategy : the Nixon-Kissinger revolution at the National Security Council / William Inboden -- George H.W. Bush : strategy and the stream of history / Jeffrey A. Engel -- Foreign missions and strategy, foreign missions as strategy / Emily Conroy-Krutz -- The unbearable whiteness of grand strategy / Adriane Lentz-Smith -- Rival visions of nationhood : immigration policy, grand strategy, and contentious politics / Daniel J. Tichenor -- Disastrous grand strategy : US humanitarian assistance and global natural catastrophe / Julia F. Irwin -- Denizens of a center : rethinking early Cold War grand strategy / Ryan Irwin -- Reproductive politics and grand strategy / Laura Briggs -- Casualties and the concept of grandness : a view from the Korean War / Mary L. Dudziak -- American grand strategy : how grand has it been? How much does it matter? / Fredrik Logevall
Summary "In recent years, historians and other scholars have offered useful definitions, most of which coalesce around the notion that grand strategy is an amplification of the "normal" strategic practice of deploying various means to attain specific ends. "The crux of grand strategy," writes Paul Kennedy, co-founder of the influential Grand Strategy program at Yale University, "lies...in policy, that is, in the capacity of the nation's leaders to bring together all the elements, both military and nonmilitary, for the preservation and enhancement of the nation's long-term (that is, in wartime and peacetime) best interests." John Lewis Gaddis, the program's co-founder with Kennedy, defines grand strategy succinctly as "the alignment of potentially unlimited aspirations with necessarily limited capabilities." Hal Brands, an alumnus of Yale's program and a contributor to this volume, observes that grand strategy is best understood as an "intellectual architecture that lends structure to foreign policy; it is the logic that helps states navigate a complex and dangerous world." Peter Feaver, who followed Yale's model when establishing a grand strategy program at Duke University, is somewhat more specific: "Grand strategy refers to the collection of plans and policies that comprise the state's deliberate effort to harness political, military, diplomatic, and economic tools together to advance that state's national interest." International Relations theorist Stephen Walt is even more precise: "a state's grand strategy is its plan for making itself secure. Grand strategy identifies the objectives that must be achieved to produce security, and describes the political and military actions that are believed to lead to this goal. Strategy is thus a set of 'contingent predictions': if we do A, B, and C, the desired results X, Y, and Z should follow.""-- Provided by publisher
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Description based on online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on March 09, 2021)
Subject National security -- United States -- History
Strategy -- History
Diplomatic relations
Military policy
National security
Strategy
SUBJECT United States -- Foreign relations. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85140058
United States -- Military policy. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85140379
Subject United States
Genre/Form Electronic books
History
Form Electronic book
Author Borgwardt, Elizabeth, 1964- editor.
Nichols, Christopher McKnight, editor.
Preston, Andrew, 1973- editor.
LC no. 2020036112
ISBN 9780190695682
0190695684
9780190093143
0190093145
9780190695699
0190695692