The postmodern president : George Bush meets the world
著者
書誌事項
The postmodern president : George Bush meets the world
Chatham House, c1991
2nd ed
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注記
Includes bibliographical references (p. 361-388) and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
"Richard Rose has produced an exceptional book, not just about presidents but also about how they connect-or fail to connect-with Washington and the world. His unique comparative approach-blending process with politics and policy-results in an insightful, engaging treatment of the presidency and its place in the broader American system."
- I.M. Destler, University of Maryland
目次
- Part 1 Imperative pressures for success: the emergence of the postmodern Presidency - from the traditional to the postmodern President
- learning to live with other elephants
- the imperatives of the Presidency - going Washington
- going public
- going international
- juggling imperatives
- assessing the Presidency - conflicting standards for the modern President
- the postmodern President
- between world leadership and global failure
- widening the view from the Oval office - an alternative to the Presidency
- subgovernments and government
- the responsibility gap. Part 2 Tangible and intangible resources of leadership: resources and constraints of government - how much does government do?
- government as a constraint
- sizing up resources means cutting the President down to size
- learning to campaign or learning to govern? - coming in from the outside
- another way - going government
- comings and goings of leaders
- perpetually campaigning for support - leading a no-party system
- courting mass popularity through the media, courting Congress
- taking over the White House - hitting the ground running - energy in search of direction
- keeping control within the White House
- political strategies for organizing the White House
- the President - a chief but not an executive - coming to terms with the executive branch
- the President as a policy taster
- keeping out of trouble
- influencing organized anarchy. Part 3 Problems of leadership without hegemony: the economy - an open market for policy - trying to manage a bucking-bronco economy
- adding up numbers that don't add up
- living with your banker
- national security - one country but many voices - allies and enemies within Washington
- pursuing security from the White House
- the international system is stronger than the President - keeping the military balance
- the end of American hegemony
- toward American-Japanese bigemony
- the White House in an open market. Part 4 Evaluation: how popular should a President be? - how much approval?
- when a President should be unpopular
- no long-term decline
- as the world closes in - after Reagan, the great asymmetry
- the future of the postmodern President
- George Bush as a postmodern President
- guardianship - the idea of the Bush presidency
- the budget inheritance
- foreigners with alien policies
- the test of war in the Persian Gulf
- vulnerability of a postmodern president. Appendices: Presidents of the United States
- the President in the constitution
- inaugural address of President John F.Kennedy
- nomination acceptance speech of George Bush
- inaugural address of President George Bush.
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