Join us for our upcoming Chat & Chowder to learn more about how the U.S. has achieved global hyperpower status, and how it can leverage its foreign policy goals in the future. This virtual program will feature Dr. Michael Mandelbaum, Professor Emeritus of American Foreign Policy at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies, for expert insights from his recent book The Four Ages of American Foreign Policy.
After the program, don’t forget to stay for the post-Chat Chat! This informal community discussion, led by Dr. Hendrik Ohnesorge, Associate at Harvard University’s Weatherhead Center for International Affairs and Managing Director of the Center for Global Studies at the University of Bonn, is a great way to continue the conversation and engage with other interested participants (separate Zoom link provided). All are welcome, and it’s BYOCB — bring your own chowder and beverages!
The United States is now nearly 250 years old. It arose from humble beginnings, as a strip of mostly agrarian and sparsely populated English colonies on the northeastern edge of the New World, far removed from the centers of power in Europe. Today, it is the world’s most powerful country, with its largest economy and most powerful military. How did America achieve this status?
In The Four Ages of American Foreign Policy, Michael Mandelbaum offers a new framework for understanding the evolution of the foreign policy of the United States. He divides that evolution into four distinct periods, with each defined by the consistent increase in American power relative to other countries. His history of the four periods features engaging accounts of the major events and important personalities in the foreign policy of each era. Throughout, Mandelbaum highlights fundamental continuities in the goals of American foreign policy and in the way that policy was adopted and implemented. He portrays the United States, in its ascent, first as a weak power, from 1765 to 1865, then as a great power between 1865 and 1945, next as a superpower in the years 1945 to 1990, and finally as the world’s sole hyperpower, from 1990 to 2015. He also presents three features of American foreign policy that are found in every era: first, the goal of disseminating the political ideas Americans have embraced from the first; second, the use of economic instruments in pursuit of the country’s foreign policy goals; and third, a process for formulating policy and implementing decisions shaped by considerable popular influence. American foreign policy, as he puts it, has been unusually ideological, unusually economic, and unusually democratic.
Michael Mandelbaum is the Christian A. Herter Professor Emeritus of American Foreign Policy at The Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies in Washington, D.C. He has also held teaching posts at Harvard and Columbia Universities, and at the United States Naval Academy. He serves on the board of advisors of The Washington Institute for Near East Policy, a Washington-based organization sponsoring research and public discussion on American policy toward the Middle East.
A graduate of Yale College, Professor Mandelbaum earned his Master’s degree at King’s College, Cambridge University and his doctorate at Harvard University. He is the author of sixteen previous books, including Mission Failure, The Rise and Fall of Peace on Earth, and, with Thomas L. Friedman, That Used to Be Us.
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