The origins of public diplomacy in US statecraft : uncovering a forgotten tradition

Author(s)

    • Schindler, Caitlin E.

Bibliographic Information

The origins of public diplomacy in US statecraft : uncovering a forgotten tradition

Caitlin E. Schindler

(Palgrave Macmillan series in global public diplomacy)

Palgrave Macmillan, c2018

  • : [hardcover]
  • : softcover

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Note

softcover: "c2018, softcover reprint of the hardcover 1st edition 2017"--T.p. verso

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This book examines historic examples of US public diplomacy in order to understand how past uses and techniques of foreign public engagement evolved into modern public diplomacy as a tool of American statecraft. The study explores six historic cases where the United States' government or private American citizens actively engaged with foreign publics, starting with the American Revolution in 1776 through the passage of the Smith-Mundt Bill of 1948. Each case looks specifically at the role foreign public engagement plays in American statecraft, while also identifying trends in American foreign public engagement and making connections between past practice of foreign public engagement and public diplomacy, and analyzing how trends and past practice or experience influenced modern American public diplomacy.

Table of Contents

1. Reconnecting the Past and Present 2. America's First Public Diplomat 3. Public Diplomacy of the Union 4. Early Public-Private Partnerships 5. America's Public Diplomacy Agency? 6. Inter-War Public Diplomacy 7. Public Diplomacy in Chaos & Ambiguity 8. Public Diplomacy: An American Tradition in Context

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