Local Interests and American Foreign Policy: Why International Interventions Fail

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Routledge, Jul 18, 2013 - Political Science - 192 pages
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This book provides an alternative perspective on how social interest-groups form and interact to affect interventions. It combines historic, sociological and international relations perspectives in a framework through which to view the relevant socio-political dynamics in ‘target societies’. At a time when American foreign policy seeks to redefine its objectives and its methods of intervention, the monolithic ideological assumptions of the state as the panacea to all social ailments, both as a format and a vehicle of norm delivery, seemingly dooms American foreign policy and European allies, to the repetition of old mistakes.

In environments where interests and priorities are shaped on a highly localised basis, interventionist agendas often lack relevant meaning. The book focuses in particular on the contrast between the assumptions inherent in ‘Western’ interventionist strategies and social interest formation in Afghanistan, Somaliland, and Somalia. Based on extensive fieldwork, the book draws on available literature and on interviews with local population or international aid and development workers. The conclusion is that in the cases examined, the agency of local interest groups largely controls the outcome of external strategies.

This book will be of great interest to students and scholars of US Foreign Policy, International Relations and Security Studies.

 

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Contents

the ORSDINTI Principle
1
1 Strategies and the theories behind them
15
2 An alternative framework for viewing sociopolitical dynamics
44
in the shadows of mountains
74
in the shade of the meeting tree
106
5 Conclusions
136
Notes
152
Bibliography
157
Index
173
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