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BEYOND
THE BELTWAY
ENGAGING THE PUBLIC IN U.S. FOREIGN POLICY
(New
York: W.W. Norton and Company, 1994)
by
Daniel Yankelovich and I. M. Destler, Editors
With
the end of the Cold War and the election of Bill Clinton as president,
anxiety about America's economic future has replaced foreign affairs as
the country's main concern. The United States needs to redefine its national
security in terms of a strong domestic policy. But will this lead to a
new isolationism that would weaken American ties to the world? In the
absence of the stable public consensus that supported an anti-Communist
foreign policy, U.S. Ieaders will need to forge a more direct dialogue
with a skeptical public on which U.S. foreign interests they deem vital.
In this new climate, how can American policy makers adapt to broaden public
support for a strong foreign policy? In this collection of original essays,
sponsored by the American Assembly, some of the nation's leading experts
on foreign affairs assess the problem of building public involvement in
foreign policy in the post-superpower era. Included is Daniel Yankelovich's
and John Immerwahr's influential rendering of how to influence public
opinion through a series of phased campaigns.
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