In Congress and U.S. Foreign Policy, leading scholars examine the foreign policy activity, role and influence of the U.S. Congress in the current polarized and partisan political context. Challenging conventional views, the contributors reveal how members of Congress have been active and assertive, utilizing numerous different means to influence US foreign policy, sometimes supporting and sometimes opposing the President.
The contributors provide in-depth analysis and expert perspectives on the issues, decisions, and debates that have arisen across multiple presidential administrations in the polarized political context since the end of the Cold War. This polarized environment greatly increases the conflict among, and complicates the ability of, policymakers to reach compromises, much less consensus, on the appropriate ends and means of US foreign policy.
This timely and cohesive reassessment of the tumultuous years of the most recent presidential administrations focuses analytical attention on the patterns of engagement between Congress and the President and the range of avenues and influence by the collective institution and its individual members. It thus sheds light on the role and behavior of Congress and its members in US foreign policy as a vital aspect of understanding how and why the US chooses its policy courses toward the world.
Leading scholars in the study of congress and US foreign policy address congress’s vital role in determining how and why the US chooses it's international policy agendas. They address key aspects of congressional activism, assertiveness, and acquiescence in an era of divided government and polarized politics.
Introduction: Understanding Congress and Foreign Policy
Ralph G. Carter and James M. Scott
Chapter 1 - Shifting Constellations of Congressional Foreign Policy During the Trump Era
Patrick Homan, Dominican University, and Scott LaDeur, North Central Michigan College
Chapter 2 - Anti-Presidential Bipartisanship in Foreign Policy in the Trump Era
Jordan Tama, American University
Chapter 3 - The Polarization of the Defense and Foreign Policy Committees
William Bendix, Keene State College and Gyung-Ho Jeong, University of British Columbia
Chapter 4 - The Continued Decline of Congressional Oversight of US Foreign Policy
Linda L. Fowler, Dartmouth College
Chapter 5 - The Conditional Nature of Congressional Support for the President During Wartime
Susanne Schorpp, Jeffrey Lazarus, and Micayla Clark, Georgia State University
Chapter 6 - The Congressional Role in US Diplomacy in an Era of Presidential Unilateralism: The End of the Treaty Power
Jeffrey S. Peake, Clemson University
Chapter 7 - Opening Wi
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
Ralph G. Carter is Piper Professor of Texas, professor, and former chair of the department of Political Science at Texas Christian University. His areas of specialization include international relations and comparative foreign policy analysis, with a particular emphasis on the domestic sources of foreign policy.
James M. Scott is the Herman Brown chair and professor of Political Science at Texas Christian University. His primary research and teaching interests are in international relations and foreign policy analysis, and he has special interests in US foreign policymaking, the role of Congress, and US democracy promotion.