Contact us on (02) 8445 2300
For all customer service and order enquiries

Woodslane Online Catalogues

9780815703099 Add to Cart Academic Inspection Copy

The Obama Administration and the Americas

Agenda for Change
Description
Author
Biography
Sales
Points
Reviews
Google
Preview
The Obama administration inherits a daunting set of domestic and international policy challenges. It would be tempting to put Latin America and the Caribbean on the back burner, for their nations pose no imminent security threat nor do they seem at first blush critical to the most pressing problems of U.S. foreign policy. The Obama Administration and the Americas, however, argues that the new administration should focus early and strategically on Latin America.
Abraham F. Lowenthal is a professor of international relations at the University of Southern California and a nonresident senior fellow at the Brookings Institution.Theodore J. Piccone is a senior fellow and deputy director for Foreign Policy Studies at the Brookings Institution and an adviser to the Club of Madrid.Laurence Whitehead is an official fellow in politics at Nuffield College at the University of Oxford and editor of the Oxford Studies in Democratisation series.
"This excellent book is especially welcome at a time when Latin America hopes for significant changes in U.S. foreign policy. Written by scholars and practitioners with a deep understanding of Latin American societies and politics, it will help craft a more constructive relationship between the region and the United States It tackles the 'hard cases' --Bolivia, Colombia, Cuba, Haiti, Mexico, and Venezuela --and provides broad regional and historical perspectives as well." --Fernando Henrique Cardoso, President of Brazil, 1995-2003 "An excellent contribution for thinking about Latin American-United States relations from a new perspective. Is it finally possible, through frank dialogue, to build a new partnership in the Americas? The authors of this timely book give a promising and hopeful response." --Ricardo Lagos, President of Chile, 2000-06 "This useful volume by a stellar group of experts should be warmly welcomed by the Obama administration as it tries to reset the course of U.S. policy toward the Americas based on mutual respect and convergence of interests." --Ambassador Thomas Pickering, Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs, 1997-2001 "This timely, pragmatic volume recommends a more strategic U.S. approach to Latin America based on constructive and focused inter-American partnerships on the issues that matter most to our people's daily lives, such as democracy and the rule of law, energy, immigration, jobs, and the environment. An excellent addition to the reading list for policymakers, analysts and practitioners alike --and another sterling contribution from top scholars of the Western Hemisphere." --Thomas "Mack" McLarty, White House Special Envoy for the Americas, 1996-98
"Useful survey of inter-American relations." Times Literary Supplement |"This excellent book is especially welcome at a time when Latin America hopes for significant changes in U.S. foreign policy. Written by scholars and practitioners with a deep understanding of Latin American societies and politics, it will help craft a more constructive relationship between the region and the United States It tackles the 'hard cases' Bolivia, Colombia, Cuba, Haiti, Mexico, and Venezuela and provides broad regional and historical perspectives as well." Fernando Henrique Cardoso, President of Brazil, 1995-2003 |"An excellent contribution for thinking about Latin American-United States relations from a new perspective. Is it finally possible, through frank dialogue, to build a new partnership in the Americas? The authors of this timely book give a promising and hopeful response." Ricardo Lagos, President of Chile, 2000-06 |"This useful volume by a stellar group of experts should be warmly welcomed by the Obama administration as it tries to reset the course of U.S. policy toward the Americas based on mutual respect and convergence of interests." Ambassador Thomas Pickering, Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs, 1997-2001 |"This timely, pragmatic volume recommends a more strategic U.S. approach to Latin America based on constructive and focused inter-American partnerships on the issues that matter most to our people's daily lives, such as democracy and the rule of law, energy, immigration, jobs, and the environment. An excellent addition to the reading list for policymakers, analysts and practitioners alike and another sterling contribution from top scholars of the Western Hemisphere." Thomas "Mack" McLarty, White House Special Envoy for the Americas, 1996-98
Google Preview content