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FOREIGN AFFAIRS INDEX

    The following topical index is of selected articles from the publication Foreign Affairs.  The articles cited do not represent all the articles Foreign Affairs has published on a topic.  The time frame covered is January 1997 to the present, with selected articles from previous years.  Foreign Affairs, which is published by the Council on Foreign Relations, based in New York City, represents one of the most influential sources of commentary in the area of international relations.   

    Readers are encouraged to review these Foreign Affairs articles and to review the publication's web site and the web site of the Council on Foreign Relations at http://www.foreignaffairs.org. Students and educators interested in world affairs will find this publication an excellent information resource.

 

TABLE OF CONTENTS

 


Africa

A Poor Case for Quitting: Mistaking Incompetence for Interventionism," by Chester Crocker (Chairman of the Board of the U.S. Institute for Peace (January/February 2000)

Democracy in Africa: No Time to Foresake It, by Joel D. Barkan and David F. Gordon (July/August 1998)

Africa's New Bloc, by Dan Connell and Frank Smyth (March/April 1998)

 

American Foreign Policy

The One Percent Solution, by Richard Gardner (Professor of Law and International Organization at Columbia University) (July/August 2000) [An about time article about the U.S. budget and the low priority of American foreign policy)

The Squandered Presidency, by Richard N. Haas (Vice President and Director of Foreign Policy Studies, Brookings Institution) (May/June 2000)

Two Cheers for Clinton's Foreign Policy: Under the Circumstances," by Stephen M. Walt (Professor of International affairs, Harvard University's John F. Kennedy School of Government) (March/April 2000)

What to Do with American Primacy, Richard N. Haas (Vice President, Director of Foreign Policy Studies, Brookings Institution) (September/October 1999)

Between the Old Left and New Right: In Defense of Detente, by Henry Kissinger (May/June 1999)

The Lonely Superpower, by Samuel P. Huntington (March/April 1999)

Bully of the Free World, by Gary Wills (March/April 1999)

Squandering Triumph, by Charles William Maynes (January/February 1999)

Saving America from the Coming Civil Wars, by Steven R. David (January/February 1999)

The New Threat of Mass Destruction, by Richard K. Betts (January/February 1998)

How America Does It, by Josef Joffe (September/October 1997)

The Erosian of American Interests, by Samuel P. Huntington (September/October 1997)

A Geostrategy from Eurasia, by Zbigniew Brzezinski (September/October 1997)

Transforming the Military, by William E. Odom (July/August 1997)

America, A European Power, by Richard Holbrooke (March/April 1995)

On American Principles, by George F. Kennan (March/April 1995)

Toward a Neo-Reaganite Foreign Policy, by William Kristol and Robert Kagan (July/August 1996)

Post-Heroic Military Policy, by Edward N. Luttwak (July/August 1996)

Foreign Policy as Social Work, by Michael Mandelbaum (January/February 1996)

Pivotal States and U.S. Strategy, by Robert S. Chase, Emily B. Hill, Paul Kennedy (January/February 1996)

 

Bosnia/Balkans

Kosovo Seething, by David Rohde (journalist formerly with the Christian science monitor and the New York Times) (May/June 2000) 

Dayton's Incomplete Peace, by Ivo H. Daalder (Senior Fellow, Brookings Institution), Michael B.G. Froman (Senior Fellow, Council on Foreign Relations) (November/December 1999) 

A European "New Deal" for the Balkans, by Benn Steil (Senior Fellow, Council on Foreign Relations) and Susan L. Woodward (Senior Fellow, Centre For Defense Studies at Kings College, University of London) (November/December 1999)

A Perfect Failure, by Michael Mandelbaum (Whitney H. Shepardson Fellow, Council on Foreign Relations) (September/October 1999)

The Fallout from Kosovo, by Peter W. Rodman [Director of National Security Programs at the Nixon Center] (July/August, 1999)

Kosovo's Next Masters?, by Chris Hedges (Neman Fellow, Harvard Univ. NYT Balkan Bureau Chief, 1995-1998) (May/June 1999)

Imagining Kosovo; A Biased New Account Fans Western Confusion, by Aleksa Djilas (September/October 1998)

The Triage of Dayton, by Warren Bass (September/October 1998)

Making Bosnia Work, by Charles G. Boyde (January/February 1998)

The Exit Strategy Delusion, by Gideon Rose (January/February 1998)

The Last Ambassador: A Memoir of the Collapse of Yugoslavia, by Warren Zimmerman (March/April 1995)

 

Canada

Will Canada Unravel?, by Charles F. Doran (September/October 1996)

Canada's Continuing Identity Crisis, by Conrad Black (March/April 1995)

 

China

Does China Matter?, by Gerald Segal (Director of Studies, International Institute for Strategic Studies, London) (September/October 1999)

China and the Asian Contagion, by Nicholas R. Lardy (July/August 1998)

Is China Democratizing?, by Minxin Pei (January/February 1998)

Beijing as a Conservative Power, by Robert S. Ross (March/April 1997)

Chinese Realpolitik, by Thomas J. Christensen (September/October 1996)

 

Democracy

Has Democracy a Future?, by Arthur Schlesinger, Jr. (September/October 1997)

Democracy Without Illusions, by Thomas Carothers (January/February 1997)

 

Diplomacy and U.S. Foreign Relations

The Bullied Pulpit: A Weak Executive Makes Worse Foreign Policy, by Sabastion Mallaby (member of Washington post Editorial Board) (January/February 2000)

State's Rights and Foreign Policy: Some Things Should be Left to Washington, by Brannon P. Denning (Assistant Professor, Southern illinois University School of Law)and Jack H. McCall (Associate, Hunton & Williams) (January/February 2000)

Diplomacy Without Diplomats?, by George F. Kennan (September/October 1997)

Dollars and Sense Diplomacy, by Lawrence S. Eagleburger and Robert L. Barry (July/August 1996)

Affording Foreign Policy, by Joshua Muravchik (March/April 1996)

 

Diplomatic History

The Berlin Airlift and the City's Future (July/August 1998)

The Marshall Plan and Its Legacy (May/June 1997)

 

Europe

The Trouble with France, by Dominique Moisi (May/June 1998)

Europe's Rise to Regionalism, by John Newhouse (January/February 1997)

 

Iraq

Getting it Backward on Iraq, by F. Gregory Gause III (Assoc, Prof of Poly Sci, Univ. of Vermont) (May/June 1999)

The Roll Back Fantasy, by Daniel Byman, Kenneth Pollack and Gideon Rose (January/February 1999)

Differentiated Containment, by Zbigniew Brzezinski, Brent Scowcroft and Richard Murphy (May/June 1997)

 

Middle East

The West and the Middle East, by Bernard Lewis (January/February 1997)

 

Morality and Foreign Policy

Morality and Foreign Policy, by George F. Kennan (Winter 1985-1986)

 

NATO/North Atlantic Treaty Organization

An Unhappy Successful Marriage: Security Means Knowing What to Expect, by Michael Howard, [former Regius Professor of Modern history at Oxford University, life President of the International Institute of Strategic Studies] (May-June, 1999)

Did NATO Win the Cold War?: Looking Over the Wall, by Vojtech Mastny [Senior Research Scholar at the Cold War International history Project of the Woodrow Wilson Center in Washington, D.C., also heads parallel project on history of NATO and Warsaw Pact at the National Archive] (May-June 1999)

Maximizing NATO: A Relevant Alliance Knows How to Reach, by Robert E. Hunter [Senior Advisor at RAND in Washington, D.C.; Ambassador to NATO 1993-1998] (May-June 1999)

Minimalist NATO: A Wise Alliance Knows When to Retrench, by Michael E. Brown [Director of research, National security Studies Program at Edmund A. Walsh School of foreign Service, Georgetown University] (May-June, 1999)

 

Russia

The Many Faces of Modern Russia, by Sam Nunn (former Chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee) and Adam N. Stulberg (Assistant Professor, Sam Nunn School of International Affairs at the Georgia Institute of Technology) (March/April 2000)

 

(U.S.) Sanctions Policy

What Sanctions Epidemic?, by Jesse Helms (January/February 1999)

Sanctioning Madness, by Richard N. Haas (November/December 1997)

Adjusting to Sanctions, by Jahangir Amuzegar (May/June 1997)

 

The United Nations/UN

Bewitched, Bothered, and Bewildered: Repairing the Security Council, by Richard Butler (Diplomat in Residence, Council on Foreign Relations, former Executive Chair, UN Special Commission on the disarmament of Iraq and formerly Australia's Permanent Representative to the UN) (September/October 1999)

Picking Up UN Peacekeeping's Pieces, by John Hillen (July/August 1998)

Saving the UN, by Jesse Helms (September/October 1996)

 

War Crimes/Human Rights/International Law

Rwanda in Retrospect, by Alan J. Kuperman (Fellow, MIT's Center for International Studies) (January/February 2000)

The New Interventionism: The Search for a Just International Law, by Michael J. Glennon (Professor of Law, Univ. of Cal Davis Law School, former counsel to Senate Foreign Relations Committee) (March/April 1998)

Sidelined on Human Rights, by Kenneth Roth (March/April 1998)

The Specter of Secession, by Hurst Hannum (March/April 1998)

The Rule of Law Revival, by Thomas Carothers (March/April 1998)

Answering for War Crimes: Lessons from the Balkans, by Theodore Meron (January/February 1997)

Somalia and the Future of Humanitarian Intervention, by Walter Clarke and Jeffrey Herbst (March/April 1996)

 

World Economy

China's Big Mac Attack, by James L. Watson (Fairbank Professor of Chinese Society and Professor of Anthropology at Harvard University) (May/June 2000) [interesting insight into how MacDonald's Corporation has operated in China and its affect on Chinese evolving modern culture]

Brazil's New Capitalism, by Juan de Onis (journalist formerly with the New York Times and the Los Angeles Times) (May/June 2000)

Learning to Love the WTO, by Marcus Noland (Senior Fellow, Institute for International Economics) (September/October 1999)

Eight Steps to A New Financial Order, by Alan S. Blinder (Gordon S. Rentchler Professor of Economics at Princeton University formerly Vice-Chairman of the Federal Reserve (September/October 1999)

A Capital Idea: Reconsidering a Financial Quick Fix, by Sabastion Edwards (Henry Ford II Prof of Int'l Ec. at UCLA's Anderson Graduate School of Management, chief economist for Latin America at World Bank from 1993 to 1996) (May/June 1999)

America and Europe:Clash of Titans ?, by C. Fred Bergsten (March/April 1999)

Lessons for the Next Financial Crisis, by Jeffrey E. Garten (March/April 1999)

A Self-Help Guide for Emerging Markets, by Martin Feldstein (March/April 1999)

The Return of Depression Economics, by Paul Krugman (January/February 1999)

In Defense of the IMF, by Stanley Fischer (July/August 1998)

The Capital Myth, by Jagdish Bhagwati (May/June 1998)

Business and Foreign Policy, by Jeffrey E. Garten (May/June 1997)

Globalization and Its Discontents, by Richard N. Haas and Robert E. Litan (May/June 1998)

Refocusing the IMF, by Martin Feldstein (March/April 1998)

The Liquidity Trap: Latin America's Free-Market Past, by Michael Pettis (November/December 1996)

 

World Views

The Troubled History of Partition, by Radha Kumar (January/February 1997)

Global Public Policy, by Wolfgang H. Reinicke (November/December 1997)

The Rise of Illiberal Democracy, by Fareed Zakaria (November/December 1997)

Case Study in Ethnic Strife, by David Rieff (March/April 1997)

The West: Unique, Not Universal, by Samuel P. Huntington (November/December 1996)

 

Miscellaneous

Making Foreign Aid Work, by Carol Graham and Michael O'Hanlon (July/August 1997)

The Shrinking of Foreign News, by Garrick Utley (March/April 1997)

Inquiring Minds: The Story of the Council on Foreign Relations (January/February 1997) (a review)