Democracy at the Point of BayonetsPenn State Press, 1999 M08 15 - 272 páginas No country has worked harder to coerce others to adopt liberal institutions than the United States. This book examines the promotion of democracy during U.S. military interventions in the twentieth century, showing it to be one of the central ways in which the United States attempts to reconcile the potential contradictions involved in being a liberal great power. Examining interventions from the Spanish-American War through recent actions in Bosnia, Mark Peceny shows how the United States has encouraged the institution of free elections and other liberal reforms—often at the point of bayonets. Peceny applies statistical analysis to ninety-three cases of intervention and presents six case studies: Cuba and the Philippines after the Spanish-American War, Vietnam during the Kennedy administration, El Salvador during Reagan's first term, and Clinton's interventions in Haiti and Bosnia. By forging a synthesis of realist and domestic liberal approaches, Peceny illuminates the roles that both security concerns and liberal values play in the formulation and implementation of foreign policy. He shows how presidents often initially choose proliberalization policies to serve U.S. security interests and how Congress exerts pressure when presidents fail to take the initiative. Under these circumstances, he shows, presidents use the promotion of democracy to build domestic political consensus and to legitimize interventions. Although the United States has failed to promote democracy in most interventions, Peceny demonstrates that it has often had a profound and positive impact on the democratization of target states. His study offers new insight into the relationship between American power, the promotion of democracy, and prospects for the liberal peace in the decades to come. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 83
... liberal reforms even when policymakers believed such reforms could harm U.S. ... domestic political con- sensus and " policy legitimacy ” for U.S. ... liberal argument , however , to understand why the United States does not pursue a ...
... domestic liberalism play the most important role in shaping the foreign policy behavior of liberal states . Realists expect states to go to war whenever necessary to ... liberal peace , The Promotion of Democracy and the Liberal Peace 5.
... liberal states tend not to war with one another , they participate in wars as often as do illiberal states.4 Indeed ... domestic liber- alism might explain the separate peace that has emerged among democracies , one must integrate the realist ...
... liberal argu- ments are pushing in the same direction . The comparatively ... domestic consensus for an activist foreign policy in the context of a ... liberal pacific union can be an effective strategy for convincing other liberal powers ...
... government in the target state reduce the probability that U.S. presidents will experiment with liberalizing reforms . The domestic liberal argument , on the other hand , suggests that America's liberal culture pushes it to promote ...
Contenido
The SpanishAmerican War and the Foundations of the ProDemocratic | 49 |
The Presidential Path to the Promotion | 83 |
Congressional Pressure and Reagans Policy | 115 |
Democratic Enlargement in Haiti and Bosnia | 149 |
The Impact of U S Intervention on Democratization | 183 |
Leader of the Free World | 217 |
Index | 241 |