000 02527nam a22002177a 4500
005 20220702115717.0
008 210925b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a9781576752814
040 _cAL
041 _aEnglish
082 _223
_a327.73
_bGARA
100 _aJim Garrison
_946772
245 _aAmerica as empire
_bGlobal Leader or Rogue Power?
260 _aCalifornia
_bBerrett Koehler Publishers Inc
_c2004
300 _axii,224
_bHB
_c23x14 cm
365 _b$24.95
_c$
_d$24.95
520 _aIn America as Empire, Jim Garrison urges us to face up to the complexities and responsibilities inherent in the indisputable fact that America is now the world's single preeminent power. "America", Garrison writes, "has become what it was founded not to be: established as a haven for those fleeing the abuse of power, it has attained and now wields near absolute power. It has become an empire." Garrison traces the roots of the American empire to the very beginnings of the republic, in particular to the historic willingness of United States' to use military might in the defense of two consistent --- if sometimes contradictory --- foreign policy objectives: protection of American commercial interests and promotion of democracy. How long can the American empire last? Garrison looks at American history within the context of the rise and fall of empires and argues that the U. S. can gain important insights into durability from the Romans. He details the interplay between military power, political institutions, and legal structures that enabled the Roman empire at it's apogee to last for longer than America has as a country. But the real question is, what kind of empire can and should America be? As the sole superpower, America must lead in shaping a new global order, just as after World War II Roosevelt and Truman took the lead in shaping a new international order. That international order is now crumbling under the pressures of globalization, persistent poverty, terrorism and fundamentalism. Garrison outlines the kinds of cooperative global structures America must promote if its empire is to leave a lasting legacy of greatness. Garrison calls for Americans to consciously see themselves as a transitional empire, one whose task is not to dominate but to catalyze the next generation of global governance mechanisms that would make obsolete the need for empire. If this is done, America could be the final empire.
650 _aAmerica
_9329
700 _aGarrison (Jim)
_9330
942 _2ddc
_cGF
999 _c216382
_d216382