The limits of state autonomy : societal groups and foreign policy formulation

書誌事項

The limits of state autonomy : societal groups and foreign policy formulation

edited by David Skidmore and Valerie M. Hudson

Westview Press, 1993

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注記

Bibliography: p. [298]-326

"Sponsored by the Foreign Policy Analysis Section of the International Studies Association" -- On page facintg t.p

内容説明・目次

内容説明

This is a study of domestic influences on foreign policy formulation. Comparative in approach and organized around statist, societal and transnational perspectives on the study of international relations, it introduces new theory and methodology in tracing the relationship between the organization of societal groups and foreign policy outcomes. Contributors to this volume show the variety of societal group influences of foreign policy decision-making and propose useful directions for future research.

目次

  • Establishing the limits of State autonomy - contending approaches to the study of State-society relations and foreign policy making, David Skidmore and Valerie M. Hudson. Part 1 Statist approaches: from the outside in and the inside out - international relations, domestic politics, regime response and foreign policy, Harold Muller and Thomas Risse-Krappen
  • domestic politics, regime response and foreign policy behaviour - explicating a theoretical construct, V.M. Hudson et al
  • neither compromise nor compliance - international pressures, societal influence and the politics of deception in the international drug trade, H.Richard Friman
  • grassroots activism as a factor in foreign policy making - the case of the Israeli peace movement, Tamar Hermann. Part 2 Societal approaches: domestic imperatives and rational models of foreign policy decision making, Douglas Van Belle
  • the conflicting roles of American ethnic and business interest in US economic sanctions policy - the case of South Africa, Elizabeth S. Rogers
  • the politics of national security policy - interest groups, coalitions and the SALT II debate, D. Skidmore. Part 3 Transnational approaches: expanding the foreign policy discourse - transnational social movements and the internationalization of citizenship, Ellen Dorsey
  • below, beyond, beside the State - peace and human rights movements and the end of the Cold War, David S. Meyer.

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