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Journal ArticleDOI

The Center Still Holds: Liberal Internationalism Survives

TLDR
This article found that the United States' long-standing foreign policy orientation of liberal internationalism has been in serious decline because of rising domestic partisan divisions, and that there is no evidence of a Vietnam War or a post-Cold War effect on domestic partisan division on foreign policy.
Abstract
Recent research, including an article by Charles Kupchan and Peter Trubowitz in this journal, has argued that the United States' long-standing foreign policy orientation of liberal internationalism has been in serious decline because of rising domestic partisan divisions. A reanalysis of the theoretical logic driving these arguments and the empirical evidence used to support them suggests a different conclusion. Extant evidence on congressional roll call voting and public opinion surveys, which is often used to support the claim that liberal internationalism has declined, as well as new evidence about partisan divisions in Congress using policy gridlock and cosponsorship data from other studies of American politics do not demonstrate the decline in bipartisanship in foreign policy that conventional wisdom suggests. The data also do not show evidence of a Vietnam War or a post–Cold War effect on domestic partisan divisions on foreign policy. Contrary to the claims of recent literature, the data show that g...

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Journal ArticleDOI

Who supports global economic engagement? The sources of preferences in American foreign economic policy

TL;DR: The authors explored different theoretical predictions about preferences for foreign economic policy using votes in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1979-2004, and found that aid preferences are as affected by domestic political economy factors as are trade preferences.
Book

Narrative and the Making of Us National Security

TL;DR: This paper analyzed the role of dominant narratives in US national security debates from the 1930s to the 2000s, and showed how these narratives have shaped the policies pursued by the United States.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Bottom-Up Theory of Public Opinion about Foreign Policy

TL;DR: The authors argue that elite cue-taking models in International Relations are both overly pessimistic and unnecessarily restrictive, and suggest that individuals are embedded in a social context that combines with their general orientations toward foreign policy in shaping responses toward the world around them.
Book

Consequences and correction of America's polarized politics

TL;DR: Hetherington et al. as discussed by the authors examined the consequences of political polarization on voter behavior, Congressional law-making, judicial selection, and foreign policy formation, and shed light on hotly debated institutional reform proposals, including changes to the electoral system and the congressional rules of engagement.
Journal ArticleDOI

Domestic Politics, China's Rise, and the Future of the Liberal International Order

TL;DR: The authors argue that views of the Liberal International Order (LIO) as integrative and resilient have been too optimistic for two reasons: First, China's ability to profit from within the system has shaken the domestic consensus in the United States on preserving the existing LIO.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Political Ignorance and Collective Policy Preferences

TL;DR: The authors found that policy-specific facts, such as the direction of change in the crime rate or the amount of the federal budget devoted to foreign aid, have a significant influence on the public's political judgments.
Book

Public opinion and American foreign policy

Ole R. Holsti
TL;DR: HolHolsti as mentioned in this paper explores the poorly understood role of public opinion in international affairs, looking at Americans' capacity to make informed judgments about issues far removed from their personal experience, and analyzes the relationships between public opinion and foreign policy since 9/11.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Dynamics of Legislative Gridlock, 1947–96

TL;DR: This paper revisited the effects of elections and institutions on policy outcomes to propose an alternative theory of gridlock: the distribution of policy preferences within the parties, between the two chambers, and across Congress more broadly.
Book

À la recherche du temps perdu

TL;DR: The author’s discourses, monologues, letters and diatribes are divided into four sections: literature, philosophy, criticism and criticism.
Posted Content

Connecting the Congress: A Study of Cosponsorship Networks

TL;DR: Using large-scale network analysis I map the cosponsorship networks of all 280,000 pieces of legislation proposed in the U.S. House and Senate from 1973 to 2004 and introduces a new measure called "connectedness" which uses information about the frequency of csponsorship and the number of cosponsors on each bill to make inferences about the social distance between legislators.