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_aMead, Walter Russell _958566 |
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| 245 | _aThe return of Hamiltonian statecraft: A grand strategy for a turbulent world | ||
| 260 | _aForeign Affairs | ||
| 300 | _a103(5), Sep-Oct, 2024: p.52-88 | ||
| 520 | _aThe twenty-first century has seen the return to prominence of U.S. foreign policy traditions once largely considered relics of an outmoded past. Jacksonian national populism, once dismissed as an immature sentiment that an enlightened nation had left behind, returned with a fury after 9/11. With the George W. Bush administration’s invasion of Iraq in 2003, Jeffersonian isolationism—the belief that U.S. intervention abroad leads only to endless war, the enrichment of corporate elites, and the erosion of American democracy—also reemerged as a potent force on both the right and the left.- Reproduced https://www.foreignaffairs.com/united-states/return-hamiltonian-statecraft-walter-mead | ||
| 773 | _aForeign Affairs | ||
| 906 | _aINTERNATIONAL RELATIONS | ||
| 942 | _cAR | ||