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Book Cover
E-book
Author Weintraub, Sidney

Title Economic Coercion and U.S. Foreign Policy : Implications of Case Studies from the Johnson Administration
Published Milton : Routledge, 2019

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Description 1 online resource (257 pages)
Contents Cover; Half Title; Title; Copyright; Contents; Preface; Acknowledgements; I Theory and Analysis; 1 Introduction; 2 Current Theory; 3 Common Threads in Case Studies; 4 Reformulated Theory; 5 Policy Conclusions; II Case Studies; 1 The United States and Indonesia: A Study of Economic Pressure-September 1963-October 1965; 2 Suspension of P.L. 480 Aid to the United Arab Republic in 1965; 3 The United States and India: The Use of Food to Apply Economic Pressure-1965-67; 4 United States Military Assistance to India: A Study of Economic Pressure-November 1963-November 1964
5 The Harriman-Solomon Mission and the 1966 Chilean Copper Agreement6 United States-South African Relations-1962-67; Index
Summary Why do governments-and especially the U.S. government-so frequently attempt to use economic means to coerce other countries on a one-on-one basis when critics almost universally argue that such pressure rarely works? This question forms the basis of discussion for Professor Weintraub and seven graduate students at the Lyndon B. Johnson
Notes Print version record
Subject Außenpolitik
Diplomatic relations
International economic relations.
Wirtschaftspolitik
Wirtschaftssanktion
Diplomatic relations
International economic relations
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9780429704789
042970478X