Preface -- Why study foreign policy comparatively? -- Do leaders shape foreign policy? -- How leaders make sense of the world -- Leaders are not alone: the role of advisors and bureaucracies -- Leaders in context I: domestic constraints on foreign policy making -- Leaders in context II: international constraints on foreign policy making -- Who or what determines foreign policy? -- Glossary -- Bibliography -- Index
Summary
This book's conceptual introduction to foreign policy analysis focuses on decision makers and decision making. Each chapter is organized around puzzles and questions to which undergraduate students can easily relate. The book emphasizes the importance of individuals in foreign policy decision making, while also placing decision makers within the context that shapes their perceptions and actions Publisher
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 187-202) and index
Notes
Marijke Breuning is associate professor of political science at Truman State University, Missouri's premier public liberal arts university. Her work has appeared in the American Political Review, International Studies Quarterly, Comparative Political Studies, and other refereed journals as well as edited books. She co-authored (with John T. Ishiyama) Ethnopolitics in the New Europe. She is a member of the editorial teams of Foreign Policy Analysis and the Journal of Political Science Education
English
online resource; title from PDF title page (ProQuest Ebook Central, viewed July 21, 2021)