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JACKSONIANISM (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   155208


Liberal internationalism, Jacksonian nationalism, and the us one China policy / Chen, Dean P   Journal Article
Chen, Dean P Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This article examines how Wilsonian foreign policy tradition has shaped the postwar US One China policy, and how Jacksonianism, championed by the Donald Trump administration, challenges that vision. Embracing militant nationalism, commercial mercantilism, and unilateralist diplomacy, Trump’s commitment to “One China” will more likely be conditional on Sino–American transactional interchanges.
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2
ID:   157759


Trump by Nixon : Maverick Presidents in the Years of U.S. Relative Decline / Cha, Taesuh ; Seo, Jungkun   Journal Article
Cha, Taesuh Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Does President Donald J. Trump have a coherent statecraft? Can we find a consistent grand strategy in this new administration, worth calling the “Trump Doctrine”? Mainly supported by angry Jacksonian folks who have been frustrated with economic polarization and racial anxiety, Trump’s foreign policy idea resonates well with European realism. Considering the fact that realist theory has been confined to the margins of public discourse in post–Cold War America, this unexpected return of the realist doctrine on the U.S. political scene needs to be explained. Why are we suddenly approaching realism’s moment in foreign policy? What makes prominent realists express their best wishes to President Trump? In this article, we focus on the historical parallel between two maverick presidents in modern U.S. history, Richard Nixon and Donald Trump. In particular, it is argued that the realities of the United States’ relative decline induced the Nixon and Trump administrations to embark on an unconventional course of realpolitik in world politics. The U.S. leadership in the early 1970s strived to adjust to a condition in which U.S. dominance was no longer as certain as in the early years of the postwar times by adopting unorthodox statecraft amid profound political polarization. Seemingly, the same story applies to the present administration. By attacking the liberal consensus of the establishment, domestic and international, the Trump government tries to “make America great again” in another era of increased stress. Confronting an emerging multipolar international system and the collapse of the existing national consensus, dramatic shifts in policies have been implemented to ensure that the United States will remain a hegemonic power on the world scene.
Key Words Realism  Hegemony  U.S  Nixon  Jacksonianism  Trum 
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