U.S. Global Leadership Role and Domestic Polarization : A Role Theory Approach
Book Details
AI Summary
Delivery Location
Delivery fee: Select location
In this book Gordon Friedrichs offers a pioneering insight into the implications of domestic polarization for U.S. foreign policymaking and the exercise of Americas international leadership role.
Through a mixed-method design and a rich dataset consisting of polarization data, congressional debates and letters, as well as co-sponsorship coalitions, Friedrichs applies role theory to analyze three polarization effects for U.S. leadership role-taking: a sorting effect, a partisan warfare, and an institutional corrosion effect. These effects are deployed in two comparative case studies: The Iran nuclear crisis as well as the negotiations of the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement. Friedrichs effectively exposes the drivers of polarization and how this extreme divergence has translated into partisan warfare as well as institutional corrosion, affecting direction and performance of the U.S. global leadership role.
Through advancing role theory beyond other studies and developing the concept of "diagonal contestation" as a mechanism that allows us to locate polarization within a "two-level role game" between agent and structure, U.S. Global Leadership Role and Domestic Polarization is a rich resource for scholars of international relations, foreign policy analysis, American government and polarization.
Get U.S. Global Leadership Role and Domestic Polarization by at the best price and quality guaranteed only at Werezi Africa's largest book ecommerce store. The book was published by Taylor & Francis Ltd and it has pages.
Discover books you might love based on this title.
More in This Genre
The Political Economy of Monetary Union
Ksh 10,350.00
Administering the New Federalism
Ksh 8,500.00
FDR
Ksh 3,950.00
Key Congressional Reports for July 2019 -- International Relations
Ksh 31,150.00
Critical Theory and International Relations
Ksh 15,300.00
Transferverfassungsrechtliche Probleme der Sozialversicherung
Ksh 10,200.00