Twenty-two essays and case studies analyze the domestic influences on U.S. foreign policy from the Vietnam War through the Obama administration. The collection, edited by James M. McCormick, features contributions from scholars, journalists, and public officials. It is organized into three thematic sections covering societal influences, political institutions, and decision-making case studies.
Use Cases
- Textual analysis of societal influences on foreign policy based on the thematic sections described.
- Comparative study of political institution roles based on the essays contributed by various experts.
- Case study analysis of foreign policymaking decisions highlighted in the book's third section.
Strengths
- Contains twenty-two essays, more than half of which are new or revised for the seventh edition.
- Features contributions from a distinguished group of over twenty-five scholars, journalists, and public officials.
- Provides analysis covering a long time range from the Vietnam War through the Obama administration.
Limitations
- Row count and column-level documentation are absent; field semantics must be inferred after download.
- Last update date is unknown; freshness unverified.
- License is closed, which may restrict redistribution and commercial use.
Provenance
- Source
- James M. McCormick (editor), paperswithcode
- Collection Method
- Curated collection of essays and case studies.
- Time Range
- Vietnam War through the Obama administration.
- Freshness
- unknown
- Geography
- United States