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Renowned for his compassionate and balanced thinking on international affairs, Stanley Hoffmann reflects here on the proper place of the United States in a world it has defined almost exclusively by 9/11, the war on terrorism, and the invasion of Iraq. A true global citizen, Hoffmann offers an analysis that is uniquely informed by his place as a public intellectual with one foot in Europe, the other in America. In this brilliant collection of essays, many previously unpublished, he considers the ethics of intervention, the morality of human rights, how to repair our relationship with Europe, and the pitfalls of American unilateralism.
Stanley Hoffmann (1928–2015) was the Paul and Catherine Buttenwieser Professor Emeritus at Harvard University. His books include World Disorders (Rowman & Littlefield, 1998), Gulliver Unbound (Rowman & Littlefield, 2004), and Chaos and Violence (Rowman & Littlefield 2006).
Chapter 1: Introduction: The State of the World and the State of the DisciplineChapter 2: A View of the WorldChapter 3: Lost IllusionsChapter 4: Thoughts on Fear in Global SocietyChapter 5: World Governance: Beyond UtopiaChapter 6: Peace and JusticeChapter 7: The Debate about InterventionChapter 8: Intervention: Should It Go On, Can It Go On?Chapter 9: Intervention and Human RightsChapter 10: The U.S. and Collective SecurityChapter 11: The U.S. and International Organizations: The Clinton YearsChapter 12: American Exceptionalism: The New VersionChapter 13: Why Don't They Like Us?Chapter 14: After 9/11/2001: The Pitfalls of WarChapter 15: Iraq: Instead of WarChapter 16: France, the United States, and IraqChapter 17: Out of IraqChapter 18: U.S.-European RelationshipsChapter 19: European Sisyphus
Stanley Hoffmann is the premier essayist of American foreign policy and world politics. This collection offers a kaleidoscope of penetrating and brilliant insights that reveal a rare intellect. On every page Hoffmann's light-footed eclecticism gets the better of heavy-handed fundamentalism.