Us Economic Statecraft for Survival, 1933-1991: Of Sanctions, Embargoes and Economic Warfare

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How have US economic defence policies promoted its security since 1933?
US Policies of Economic Warfare, 1933-1991 concentrates on an important and neglected facet of America's fight for survival in the latter half of the twentieth century. It explains how US policy-makers crafted and used instruments of economic statecraft against states that posed vital threats to the survival of the USA. This study situates economic defence policy within the broad context of US foreign policy and explores its response to the totalitarianism of the 1930s, the Second World War and the complex strategic and political developments of the Cold War.

Author(s): Alan P. Dobson
Series: Routledge Advances in International Relations and Politics
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2002

Language: English
Pages: 376
City: London

Book Cover
Half-Title
Title
Dedication
Copyright
Contents
Acknowledgements
List of Abbreviations
1 Economic statecraft
2 The Practice: Economic Statecraft and US Foreign Policy
3 Transforming Policy: From Peace to War 1933-42
4 The Demise of Neutrality and the Development of Economic Instruments of Coercion
5 The Truman Administration and the Development of Strategic Embargo Policy
6 Eisenhower: Problems with Colleagues and Problems with Allies
7 Thinking about Change: The Kennedy and Johnson Administrations
8 Economics becomed High Politics: Constructing the Base and Building up Détente, 1969—74
9 Ford and Carter: The Decline of Détente and the Approach of the Second Cold War 1974—9
10 Through the Second Gold War to Liberation
11 Economic Statecraft: Theoretical Considerations
12 Concluding Thoughts
Notes
Primary Sources and Bibliography
Index