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Presidents of the United States - Biography, U.S. Politics & Government - 1976-1981, U.S. Diplomatic Relations - History
The Carter implosion by Donald S. Spencer β€” book cover

The Carter implosion

by Spencer, Donald S.
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Overview

The Carter Implosion critically examines the consequences of a U.S. President -- instead of confronting problems outside the narrow context of partisan rhetoric--adopting a self-consciously amateur style of diplomacy and leadership. In particular, Spencer focuses on the enormous gulf between the Carter administration's professed objectives and the tools it was willing to employ to achieve them. The author posits that the problem was not that President Carter proved too liberal or too conservative, but that he and his closest advisors lacked a sophisticated understanding of how nations behave. Because of his naivete, Carter's promise of inaugurating a new age of American greatness disintegrated by 1980.

About the Author, Donald S. Spencer

DONALD S. SPENCER is Associate Dean of the Graduate School and Associate Professor of History at the University of Montana.

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Book Details

Published
September 28, 1988
Publisher
New York : Praeger, 1988.
Pages
176
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780275930417

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