Peter Trubowitz's study analyzes the domestic geopolitical forces shaping American foreign policy. The work argues that regional economic diversity and conflict over defining the national interest are central to U.S. foreign policy-making. It exemplifies interdisciplinary scholarship on the connections between domestic and international change.
Use Cases
- Analyzing the relationship between regional economic integration and foreign policy positions based on the described theory
- Modeling domestic political conflict over national interest definitions based on the described regionalism
- Studying interdisciplinary connections between political science and economics in foreign policy scholarship
Strengths
- Authored by a named scholar, Peter Trubowitz
- Based on a described theoretical framework linking regionalism, economics, and foreign policy
Limitations
- Row count is unknown, which may limit suitability assessment
- Column-level documentation is absent; field semantics must be inferred after download
- Data format and structure are unspecified
Provenance
- Source
- Peter Trubowitz
- Collection Method
- Scholarly analysis and study, methodology inferred from description
- Time Range
- Temporal coverage is not specified in the input
- Freshness
- Last update date is unknown; freshness unverified
- Geography
- Focus is on the United States, as indicated by the title and description