Foreign Policy and the Black (Inter)national Interest (SUNY series in African American Studies)
ISBN-13:
9780791446980
ISBN-10:
0791446980
Author:
Charles P. Henry
Publication date:
2000
Publisher:
State University of New York Press
Format:
Paperback
292 pages
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Book details
ISBN-13:
9780791446980
ISBN-10:
0791446980
Author:
Charles P. Henry
Publication date:
2000
Publisher:
State University of New York Press
Format:
Paperback
292 pages
Summary
Foreign Policy and the Black (Inter)national Interest (SUNY series in African American Studies) (ISBN-13: 9780791446980 and ISBN-10: 0791446980), written by authors
Charles P. Henry, was published by State University of New York Press in 2000.
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Description
Examines African American influence on United States foreign policy in the post-Cold War era.
With African Americans largely absent from the debate over post-Cold War foreign policy, this book gives voice to ways in which our foreign policy has fallen short of multi-cultural democratic ideals and suggests corrective measures. Covering such global issues as drug and arms control, trade, democracy-building and education, and such country specific situations as Haiti, Liberia, South Africa, and the Caribbean, from both academic and practitioners points of view, it proves that "all politics are local and global." In doing so it asks the question, can a multicultural democratic country produce a multi-cultural democratic foreign policy?
"This book captures the diversity and complexity of black participation in international relations. It is significant because most scholars have neglected the roles of race and blacks in analyses of foreign policy and international affairs." -- Ollie Johnson, University of Maryland at College Park
Contributors include Allen Caldwell, Ronald Dellums, Percy Hintzen, James Jennings, Keith Jennings, Clarence Lusane, Lorenzo Morris, Winston Nagan, Ronald Palmer, Tunau Thrash, and Ronald Walters.
With African Americans largely absent from the debate over post-Cold War foreign policy, this book gives voice to ways in which our foreign policy has fallen short of multi-cultural democratic ideals and suggests corrective measures. Covering such global issues as drug and arms control, trade, democracy-building and education, and such country specific situations as Haiti, Liberia, South Africa, and the Caribbean, from both academic and practitioners points of view, it proves that "all politics are local and global." In doing so it asks the question, can a multicultural democratic country produce a multi-cultural democratic foreign policy?
"This book captures the diversity and complexity of black participation in international relations. It is significant because most scholars have neglected the roles of race and blacks in analyses of foreign policy and international affairs." -- Ollie Johnson, University of Maryland at College Park
Contributors include Allen Caldwell, Ronald Dellums, Percy Hintzen, James Jennings, Keith Jennings, Clarence Lusane, Lorenzo Morris, Winston Nagan, Ronald Palmer, Tunau Thrash, and Ronald Walters.
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