Notice bibliographique
- Notice
Type(s) de contenu et mode(s) de consultation : Texte noté : électronique
Auteur(s) : Pee, Robert
Schmidli, William Michael (1979-....)
Titre(s) : The Reagan Administration, the Cold War, and the Transition to Democracy Promotion [Texte imprimé] / Robert Pee, William Michael Schmidli
Publication : Cham : Palgrave Macmillan, copyright 2019
Description matérielle : 1 vol. (336 pages) ; 22 cm
Collection : Security, Conflict and Cooperation in the Contemporary World
Lien à la collection : Security, conflict and cooperation in the contemporary world
Note(s) : Bibliogr. p. 303-323
Sujet(s) : Politique et gouvernement -- États-Unis -- 1981-1989
Relations extérieures -- États-Unis -- 1981-1989
Démocratisation -- 1970-....
Libéralisme économique -- 1970-....
Indice(s) Dewey :
327.730 09048 (23e éd.) = Relations extérieures - États-Unis - 1980-1989
Identifiants, prix et caractéristiques : ISBN 9783319963822. - ISBN 3319963821. - ISBN 9783319963815. - ISBN 3319963813
Identifiant de la notice : ark:/12148/cb46515990v
Notice n° :
FRBNF46515990
(notice reprise d'un réservoir extérieur)
Table des matières : Intro; Contents; Notes on Contributors; Chapter 1: Introduction: The Reagan Administration
and Democracy Promotion; The Reagan Administration and Democracy Promotion in the
Academic Literature; Part I: Ideology, Strategy, and Institutional Change in the Shift
Toward Democracy Promotion; Part II: US Democracy Promotion and the Soviet Empire;
Part III: Democracy Promotion and the Third World; Part IV: Legacy; The Historical
Record: US National Security and Democracy Promotion Before the Reagan Administration;
The Rise of Democracy Promotion Under the Reagan Administration
Part I: Ideology, Strategy, and Institutional Change in the Shift Toward Democracy
PromotionChapter 2: "A Positive Track of Human Rights Policy": Elliott Abrams, the
Human Rights Bureau, and the Conceptualization of Democracy Promotion, 1981-1984;
From Rejection to Reform: The Reagan Administration and the Question of Human Rights
During 1981; The Merger of Human Rights and Democracy Promotion, 1981-1984; The Country
Reports on Human Rights Practices and the Conceptualization of Democracy Promotion;
Conclusion
Chapter 3: The Rise of Political Aid: The National Endowment for Democracy and the
Reagan Administration's Cold War StrategyDemocracy Promotion and the Initial Cold
War Strategy of the Reagan Administration; The Rise of Political Aid; The Creation
of the National Endowment for Democracy; Political Aid and US Foreign Policy During
the Late Cold War; Conclusion; Chapter 4: Recreating the Cold War Consensus: Democracy
Promotion and the Crisis of American Hegemony; Part II: US Democracy Promotion and
the Soviet Empire
Chapter 5: The Reagan Administration's Efforts to Promote Human Rights and Democracy
in the Soviet UnionConclusion; Chapter 6: The Autonomy of Solidarity; Chapter 7: Neoliberalism
and Democracy Promotion: Hernando de Soto and US Foreign Policy; De Soto's Ideas and
Network; De Soto and US Foreign Aid; De Soto and the Collapse of Communism; Part III:
Democracy Promotion and the Third World; Chapter 8: US Electoral Assistance to El
Salvador and the Culture of Politics, 1982-1984; Rise of the Psephologists: The 1982
Constituent Assembly Elections
Managing Democracy: Preparations for the 1984 Presidential ElectionSalvaging Legitimacy:
From First Round to Runoff; Chapter 9: Reagan and the Waning Years of Uruguay's Military
Rule: Democracy Promotion and the Redefinition of Human Rights; Chapter 10: The Pivot:
Neoconservatives, the Philippines, and the Democracy Agenda; Chapter 11: Stable Imperatives,
Shifting Strategies: Reagan and Democracy Promotion in the Republic of Korea; Reagan
and America's Autocratic Friends; Democracy, Security, and US Hegemony Coalesce; Conclusion;
Part IV: Legacy