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Author Nye, Joseph S., author.

Title Do morals matter? : presidents and foreign policy from FDR to Trump / Joseph S. Nye.

Publication Info. New York, NY : Oxford University Press, [2020]

Copies

Location Call No. Status
 Avon Free Public Library - Adult Department  327.73 NYE    Check Shelf
 Manchester, Main Library - Non Fiction  327.73 NYE    Check Shelf
Description xiv, 254 pages ; 25 cm
Summary "At dinner with a group of friends, one asked what I had been doing lately. When I said I was writing a book on presidents, ethics and foreign policy, she quipped "it must be a short book." Another added more seriously, "I didn't think ethics played much of a role." That conventional wisdom marks not only dinner discussions, but political analyses as well. An Internet search shows surprisingly few books on how presidents' moral views affected their foreign policies and how that affects our judgments of them. As Michael Walzer (an important exception to the rule) described American graduate training after 1945, "moral argument was against the rules of the discipline as it was commonly practiced, although a few writers defended interest as the new morality." A survey of the top three American academic journals on international relations over fifteen years found only four articles on the subject. As one author noted, "leading scholars...do not dedicate serious attention to investigating the influence of moral values on the conduct of nations." It is not a career-enhancing topic for a young scholar, but has long intrigued me as an old practitioner and student of American foreign policy. The reasons for skepticism seem obvious to many. While historians have written about American exceptionalism and moralism, diplomats and theorists like George Kennan long warned about the bad consequences of the American moralist-legalist tradition. International relations is the realm of anarchy with no world government to provide order. States must provide for their own defense, and when survival is at stake, the ends justify the means. Where there is no meaningful choice there can be no ethics. As philosophers say, "ought implies can". No-one can fault you for not doing the impossible"-- Provided by publisher.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents Introduction: American moralism -- American exceptionalism -- Wilsonian liberalism -- The liberal international order after 1945 -- What is moral foreign policy? -- How we make moral judgements -- Double standards in dirty hands -- Mental maps of the world and moral foreign policy -- The best moral choice in the context: scorecards -- The founders -- Franklin D. Roosevelt -- Harry S. Truman -- Dwight D. Eisenhower -- The Vietnam era -- John F. Kennedy -- Lyndon Baines Johnson -- Richard M. Nixon -- Post-Vietnam Retrenchment -- Gerald R. Ford -- James Earl Carter -- The end of the Cold War -- Ronald Reagan -- George H. W. Bush -- The unipolar movement -- William Jefferson Clinton -- George Walker Bush -- Twenty-first-century power shifts -- Barack Hussein Obama -- Donald J. Trump -- Foregin policy and future choices -- Assessing ethical foreign policy since 1945 -- Contextual intelligence and moral choices -- Ups and downs of American moral traditions -- Challenges for a future moral foreign policy -- Conclusions.
Subject United States -- Foreign relations -- 1945-1989 -- Moral and ethical aspects.
United States -- Foreign relations -- 1989- -- Moral and ethical aspects.
Presidents -- Professional ethics -- United States.
Presidents -- United States -- Decision making.
Presidents -- Decision making. (OCoLC)fst01075743
Presidents -- Professional ethics. (OCoLC)fst01075793
United States. (OCoLC)fst01204155
Chronological Term Since 1945
Added Title Presidents and foreign policy from FDR to Trump
ISBN 9780190935962 (hardback)
0190935960 (hardback)
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