From one of our leading experts on foreign policy, a full-scale reinterpretation of America’s dealings—from its earliest days—with the rest of the world.
It is Walter Russell Mead’s thesis that the United States, by any standard, has had a more successful foreign policy than any of the other great powers that we have faced—and faced down. Beginning as an isolated string of settlements at the edge of the known world, this country—in two centuries—drove the French and the Spanish out of North America; forced Britain, then the world’s greatest empire, to respect American interests; dominated coalitions that defeated German and Japanese bids for world power; replaced the tottering British Empire with a more flexible and dynamic global system built on American power; triumphed in the Cold War; and exported its language, culture, currency, and political values throughout the world.
Yet despite, and often because of, this success, both Americans and foreigners over the decades have routinely considered American foreign policy to be amateurish and blundering, a political backwater and an intellectual wasteland.
Now, in this provocative study, Mead revisits our history to counter these appraisals. He attributes this unprecedented success (as well as recurring problems) to the interplay of four schools of thought, each with deep roots in domestic politics and each characterized by a central focus or concern, that have shaped our foreign policy debates since the American Revolution—the the protection of commerce; the Jef- the maintenance of our democratic system; the populist values and military might; and the moral principle. And he delineates the ways in which they have continually, and for the most part beneficially, informed the intellectual and political bases of our success as a world power. These four schools, says Mead, are as vital today as they were two hundred years ago, and they can and should guide the nation through the challenges ahead.
Special Providence is a brilliant analysis, certain to influence the way America thinks about its national past, its future, and the rest of the world.
American academic. He is the James Clarke Chace Professor of Foreign Affairs and Humanities at Bard College and previously taught American foreign policy at Yale University. He is also the Editor-at-Large of The American Interest magazine and a Distinguished Scholar at the Hudson Institute. From 1997 to 2010, Mr. Mead was a fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, serving as the Henry A. Kissinger Senior Fellow for U.S. Foreign Policy from 2003 until his departure. Mead writes regular essays at the website of the American Interest on a wide variety of subjects ranging from international affairs to religion, politics, culture, education and the media. Over the years he has contributed to a wide variety of leading American journals ranging from Mother Jones and GQ to the Wall Street Journal. He serves as a regular reviewer of books for Foreign Affairs and frequently appears on national and international radio and television programs. Mead is an honors graduate of Groton and Yale, where he received prizes for history, debate, and his translation of New Testament Greek. He has traveled widely in the Middle East, Asia, Europe, Africa, and Latin America, and often speaks at conferences in the United States and abroad. He is a founding board member of New America, and also serves on the board of Freedom House.
It's an ahistorical framework; it elides distinctions between intellectual, political and social movements; it assumes collectives have agency, and omits most of actual agents and events from the narrative; it cannot possibly be true.
But it's a delight to read and it might have changed my mind.
It has given me something to think with and things to think about. It has made me think of American history as a whole, rather than as a series of episodes.
It has suggested to me a framework that I do believe, and that might just be true: American foreign policy is as pluralist as American domestic politics, and just as shaped by contests between domestic movements in American intellectual, political, and social life.
The conceit of the book is that those movements were much the same from 1783 to 2001, with the same bases, the same preferences, and the same ideas: commerical Madisonians, missionary Wilsonians, quietist Jeffersonians, and warrior Jacksonians. That's what can't possibly be true, but even its untruth inspires reflection.
Against my better judgment, it will probably change the way I think.
Walter Russell Mead’s book is a must-read for anyone interested in U.S. foreign policy. This book has the benefit of being clearly written, engaging, and at times even a little tongue-in-cheek. The book was so good that I read it twice. This isn’t a first impression review; it’s a second impression review.
Mead’s examines the way four traditions shaped how America conducted its foreign affairs. At the heart of his books is the revisionist perspective that democracy does not necessarily lead to an inferior foreign policy, that policy makers can learn a great deal by studying the early patterns of US foreign policy, and that there is a special kind of American diplomacy that is discernible by studying the historical record.
If the old, crusty autocrats with their chessboards and amoral calculations can be called the “auteur”-style of diplomacy; then democracies like the U.S. are closer to “studio”-system style foreign policy, doing things through consensus and meetings. If democracies can’t create the “genius” of the grand masters with their chessboard calculations, then at the very least they don’t make the disastrous mistakes that often come with the hubris of genius.
The four distinct traditions that Mead outlines are as follows: Hamiltonians, who believed that a strong alliance between national government and big business was the key to effective policy abroad and at home--and that the US should engage in a global trading system; Wilsonians, who believed that the US had a moral obligation to spread democratic and social ideals; Jeffersonians, who thought that Americans should be less concerned with promoting democracy and more worried about protecting it at home; and Jacksonians, who believed that the most important role for government should be the physical security and economic well-being of its citizens (xvii).
Mead’s examination of charges regarding the naivety of US foreign policy demonstrates how much these criticisms of the US are either contradictory or confused—much of these criticisms tend to attribute the success of US foreign policy to blind luck; but also, Mead demonstrates how much of these criticisms are dependent on a very limited continental realism. Mead does two things very well in offsetting these critiques: one, he shows how in contrast to continental realist visions of the “auteur” as the master of a foreign policy, US foreign policy was often much more like a symphony (p. 39); and two, he demonstrates how the foreign policy of the United States was often much more than just the actions of its government (i.e. missionary and business interest played a very extensive role as well). Despite the often chaotic nature of US foreign policy—Mead notes especially the Cold War as time of seeming chaos—he also shows how the country can be remarkably consistent when it comes to important policies (like containment of the Soviet Union).
Mead also builds a mini-theory of national myth. National myth must be “clearer than truth” (as Dean Acheson is quoted as saying), a distillation of the facts into a simple understanding of historical tradition that can be used to galvanize the public (p. 61). Part of the project of the book, then, is reconstituting or reclaiming a myth from the wreckage of the Cold War (which is largely associated with continental realism). Reclaiming aspects of the old mythos requires understanding the four traditions at the heart of US politics.
In terms of the Hamiltonian tradition, Mead notes how they speak the language of continental realism, usually come from upper class households, and typically have ties to Anglo-Saxon origins. This tradition is both realist and idealist (the serpent and the dove)—realist in that it often takes a mercantilist approach to economics (the US was content to free ride on the British system, exporting while failing to liberalize its markets), but idealist in that it emphasizes that trade and commerce are a superior form of competition as compared with war. Mead also notes how in this formulation, open seas and open markets are often seen as “natural” (p. 107): thus the US is not above gunboat diplomacy to open markets.
In terms of Wilsonians, Mead shows how this tradition evolved out of early missionary work. He impressively links this tradition with modern ideas of a global civil society and modern relief NGOs like World Vision and Catholic Relief Service (p. 146). Eventually, the protection of missionaries and foreign property would lead to negotiations to reduce human rights abuses (p. 148). To illustrate how much influence these missionaries had, Mead notes that one survey found that around 50 percent of the foreign culture experts during WWII were the offspring of missionaries.
In terms of Jeffersonians this group, much like Jacksonians, are much more introspective and cautious about the world affairs and the prospects of the other countries becoming more like America. This tradition emphasizes the uniqueness of American democracy and the need to preserve it domestically. At the heart of Jeffersonian concerns are the negative effects of a strong government and big business that typically flourish from large entangling alliances overseas. Unlike the Wilsonians, while Jeffersonians believe that democracy is the best form of government, they are usually pessimistic about the likeliness of preserving it (and especially of promoting it overseas). Thus by defining national interests as narrowly as possible, and by promoting foreign policy as economically as possible, they hope to preserve a healthy democracy domestically.
In terms of Jacksonians, Mead notes that this group can be defined by its vibrant folk culture, its emphasis on pulling ones own weight, and military service and institutions as a redeeming for the nation. Building on the ethnic component of the book, this group’s roots are traced to the Scotch-Irish who first fought brutal wars on the frontier between England and Scotland, and then fought the Native Americans in the frontiers. The author notes, however, how this trend has now become “crab grass” Jacksonian, with much of the values being consumed by immigrant populations now serving in the military and the expansive middle class that considers honest hard work the backbone of the country (p. 231). Looking at what Mead describes as the Jacksonian idea of a “popular hero to restore government” explain why a persona like George W. Bush would be so popular (p. 239).
Mead’s final argument is that with the end of the Cold War consensus, the US needs to re-forge an understanding of the various trends that influence foreign policy. However, Mead seems divided about the relative merits about these four trends and whether this dis-consensus is a strength or weakness of the American system.
I found very little to dislike about this book. But if I had to nitpick, I might ask the question: Has the U.S. (other than the time of Nixon and Kissinger) embraced “continental realism”?
Though Mead seems to find the balancing of these disparate groups in a democracy to have a tempering effect on national hubris, preventing the worst excesses of elite groups, he also notes that US foreign policy has been strongest in times such as the Cold War and the Monroe Doctrine when debate was relatively static within these institutions. His call toward the end of the book for “considered public judgment” (p. 324) and “debate” (p. 325) seems to be little more than a call for consensus, which actually contradicts somewhat his argument the democratic foreign policy by committee approach is superior to an “auteur” approach.
I've long been a reader of Walter Russell Mead's (WRM) blog, but without quite realising why. His politics always seemed different to my own, but I liked being provoked and somewhat led along the thoughtlines of this engaging writer.
Thus, I'd been looking forward to reading this book for a while. I consider myself first & foremost a foreign policy scholar and what nation after my own is more interesting to see under the disciplinary microscope than the US. I'd also heard a lecture while I was in the US which used the conceptual framework of this book to organise the discussion. For the rest of my trip I hunted a copy of this book, but like my own white whale, failed to catch it. Instead I had to turn to the ingenuity of American commerce to eventually land a copy at my door.
At the heart of this book is the argument that US foreign policy has four schools: The most well known are the commercially inclined Hamiltonian's who built the global economic system, and the Wilsonian lawyers/missionaries who gave us its institutional framework. Less understood (and far more scorned when encountered) are the stay-at-home pessimistic Jeffersonian's (experiencing a mini-revival under the libertarian umbrella) and the god & country strivers of the Jacksonian school. If the first two schools represent the bankers and missionaries of the North East, the latter may be stereotyped as the aristocrats and red necks of the south.
Between them however, they have managed to provide a ballast and 'realism' to American foreign policy that has led this nation to a position of authority, legitimacy and significance unrivaled in human history. I use the term realism deliberately because, for all the wisdom of WRM's main argument, there's another just-as-clever theme behind the 'four schools' organisation of this book.
Much like Fukuyama's End of History, it's easy to just track the 'big idea' at the center of this book and miss the elegance and deliberateness with which the author has structured their argument. The first 100 pages or so of Special Providence are not mere throat clearing about the four schools but a very important argument: namely that US foreign policy succeeds precisely because it has not tried to follow that most well known and adored icon of foreign policy: The Continental realist.
For at least the last century to be 'serious' in international affairs was to be a realist. Despite Machiavelli's actual record as a failed diplomat scribbling away in his shed, his robes are still the most desired outfit for wanna-be scholars and practitioners. Just learn a few lines like the 'failure of Versailles' and 'Nixon going to China' and you can befriend almost any IR post-grad in the security field.
Yet WRM delivers a fairly brutal uppercut to this mythology by noting that American foreign policy seems to have succeeded precisely because it didn't follow Niccolo's maxims. Most notably, economics & economic links play a substantially larger role than the Florentine would have understood. Likewise Wilsonian idealism seems a too-obvious punching bag which some like my near-name-sake E.H. Carr made their career's taking well-aimed shots at. Yet, we live in a Wilsonian world. Likewise Jeffersonians and Jacksonians are responsible for the ingenuity and endurance of the American system when more 'realistic' advisers would have simply doubled down or given up and fold their cards.
Special Providence was released in mid-2001, yet it holds up remarkably well. Tensions with China and ill-consequences from arming the mujahideen can all be found in here. I suspect, WRM would also still endorse his call for a greater Jeffersonian voice in US foreign policy (the school I would consider myself also closest to). To be fair, I'm one of those who think politics today is only understood by those who have drank deeply from the past. This seems a somewhat rare view among many in our journalist and academic classes, so this book is a siren call to me. But I can honestly say, I've not read a book that will better explain the role & challenges of America today than this 13 year old book which spends most of its time talking about the 18 and 19th century.
You've almost got to feel sorry for W.R. Mead; the book was released in March 2001. My hunsband's reaction upon glancing at the book was to dismiss it as irrelevant to our current world and events. I decided to take a longer historical view and I'm glad I did.
The strongest parts of the book were the beginning and the end.
At the start, the writer tapped me on the shoulder and pointed out to me that what I had believed to be true about American foreign policy might not mesh well with the actual facts. (For instance, isolationists don't necessarily send the marines from the halls of Montezuma to the shores of Tripoli.) Mead also makes an argument that our policies, the ones that sometimes seem to be insanely insular or martial--running from one extreme to the other--were effective. These policies, he claims, deserve more study and more respect than they have received.
The middle of the book discusses the four schools of thought about the external policies of the U.S. This part could be more interesting. But it's not as if I was reading a novel. Academic writing is what it is and this is a great deal more accessible than a lot of things I've read.
The last chapter, "The Future of American Foreigh Policy", I found quite interesting. A lot of the sentences in this chapter end with question marks. (What are we looking for? What do we want to do?) The author didn't make the case that the U.S. was a duck sitting on the pond just waiting for terrorist strikes but he's left open the possibility that we could have been.
I also found his points about the elite people, the ones who generally end up formulating the policies that the rest of us live with, compelling. He points out that the upper ten to fifteen percent of the U.S. population no longer live lives that bring them into contact with the rest of the population. He also writes, more arguably, that persuasive speaking and writing, which might help the elite to communicate their ideas with others outside their enclave, are no longer emphasized or even properly taught.
This isn't a book I'd recommend to just anyone. But if you have an interest in foreign policy but not a lot of background to go with it, you could do worse than read this book. In fact, go for it.
This is a history of American foreign policy. The framework of the discussion is in the context of four general "schools" of American foreign policy the author coined: Hamiltonian, Wilsonian (anachronistically named after Woodrow Wilson), Jeffersonian, and Jacksonian (as in Andrew Jackson). The author describes the evolution of the schools since the early republic through the beginning of the global war on terror. The most interesting aspect I had not seen discussed before, but the universalizing aspect of the Wilsonian school, was the dependence of that school on the early 19th century missionary movement. I am not sure I buy it, because as far back as the French and Indian War, the American were going to conquer the Canadian colonies into liberty. It was an interesting take on the origins of the Wilsonian school. The author does a good job of presenting his case for his grand unified theory of US foreign policy that explains its schizophrenic vacillation between extremes of isolationism and expansionism, and its uncanny success.
I wish more foreign diplomats read the first two chapters which really lays out the case for why Americans don't practice traditional real politik style diplomacy. It would allow diplomats to better communicate understanding each other's history and POV.
The book itself is written in a very engaging middle-brow style without copious quantities of footnotes. The author has a knack for simile, metaphor and description. I loved his description of the American and British view of continental Europe in the 17th through the mid 20th century: scorpions fighting in a bottle and desperate to keeping one scorpion from winning and getting strong enough to uncork the bottle and escape.
This was an OK book on foreign policy. More theoretical and less historical. Mead develops 4 "archetypes" - Hamiltonian, Jeffersonian, Jacksonian & Wilsonian. These archetypes represent different philosophies towards foreign policy. Mead discusses each in detail and links them to events in US history. He doesn't go into too much historical detail. He is very general in his arguments. I think this is due to the fact that foreign policy is an "inexact science".
I wasn't quite sure how to rate this book. The introductory chapters usefully refute many common and widely accepted myths about American foreign policy in a spirited, engaging style. But the heart of book -- Mead's four school approach -- is far less convincing and useful.
I read “Special Providence” in preparation for Jackson’s Library Card, a virtual book club sponsored by Andrew Jackson’s Hermitage. It consists of an extensive study of what author Walter Russell Mead identifies as four schools of American foreign policy. Each school is named, though necessarily the founded by, a prominent American statesman.
Hamiltonians are described as regarding a strong alliance between the national government and big business as the key to both domestic stability and effective action abroad and have long focused on the nation’s need to be integrated into the global economy on favorable terms.
Wilsonians believe the United States has both a moral obligation and important national interest in spreading American democratic and social values throughout the world, creating a peaceful international community that accepts the rule of law.
Jeffersonians hold that American foreign policy should be concerned less with spreading democracy abroad than safeguarding it at home. They have been historically skeptical about Hamiltonian and Wilsonian policies that involve the United States with unsavory allies abroad or that increase the risks of War. Jeffersonians share suspicion of powerful elites with Jacksonians.
Jacksonians believe that the most important goal of the U.S. government in both foreign and domestic policy should be the physical security and economic well-being of the American people. Jacksonians tend to be more supportive of military action than adherents of other schools.
I characterize this work as a crossover of history and political science. Examinations of history from Alexander Hamilton to George W. Bush lead to political science theories. I have read extensively on political and historical issues but learned much from these pages. It challenges readers to think and contemplate, rather than just remember. Although written on 2001, it retains relevance as the foundation on which others base their political analysis. The author concludes with his thoughts about how the four schools can play out in the future policy decisions and articulates the need for a grand strategy, rooted in the interests of American people, respecting and serving their moral values at the lowest possible cost in blood, treasure and political concentration of power, to secure our lives, fortunes and sacred honor.
I've read an article version of this book, and I have to recommend that. This book is about 100 pages too long and often pretty circular. Still, it's a worthwhile read for scholars of USFP, and it makes some important points despite some significant problems.
Mead's main goal is to bury the idea that the US was removed from global affairs prior to 1899, 1918, or 1945. However, it isn't a William A. Williams book about US capital driving imperialism and access to markets. Instead, Mead argues that the US has fundamentally always been interested in world order and dominance of the Western hemisphere. It's just that for most of its history the US has been able to depend on Britain to bottle up the powers of continental Europe, maintain a rough BoP there, and preserve a fairly open and liberal international order. US interests in the world didn't change fundamentally as British power faded; instead, the US stepped into that role, albeit in a different, even more dominant way. Mead makes an important case that Britain is the most important country in the history of USFP, and that you can chart most of our level of global involvement by what Britain was or was not doing.
This book sort of feels like 2 books, and it probably should have been. The first book is the argument above about continuities in USFP, which I think is very valuable. The second book is a taxonomy of four foreign policy types that can be traced throughout US history. The first is Hamiltonian: business oriented, globally-minded, tries to ensure access to foreign markets and resources .
Sorry had to sign off in the middle of this review: good book that has some flaws.
This is, with no doubt, one of the best books I’ve read on American Foreign Policy.
I first encounteredd it in my AFP class but only had the opportunity to read fragments. However now that I found the time to resd it in entirety it’s amazing. Its clever, to the point, and lets us understand thw taxonomy of American Foreign Policy and why it comes as radicalky different doeending on who’s in charge.
I recommend it to everyone. Especially people who hate the US, because it makes yoj understand it rather than hate it.
Despite being published over twenty years ago, Walter Russell Mead masterfully captures the essence and complexity of U.S. foreign policy and why it’s fundamentally different than - despite frequent historical mischaracterizations - the European (prewar) style of diplomacy. This book is still a timely tool today for anybody specifically interested in understanding the domestic drivers of US foreign relations, among other things - and why Jacksonian Populism (as Mead describes it) still demands a place in political discourse.
Cool explanation/history of the various schools of thought in American politics and foreign policy. As any book of this type, there is over generalization at times but Mead created a compelling model of 4 schools: Wilsonians, Jacksonians, Hamiltonians, and Jeffersonians. If anything, highly recommend checking out chapters 4-7 for the in depth sections on these groups (most notably the populist Jacksonians)
Four schools (Hamiltonian/economic; Wilsonian/idealist, moralist; Jeffersonian/free speech and liberty; Jacksonian/right to bear arms) or views on American foreign policy, historically have always existed, blend, and separate with each issue. Combinations of each school come into play with each era of presidents. The schools are interdependent, serving as a kind of check-and-balance to ensure every voice of America is heard.
The book is a myth breaker. It not only engages you into a critical but also a creative method of looking at American foreign policy. I had read about Mead's four school perspective in my AFP class but never quite understood it. This book gave me an insight into American foreign policy that have opened up a totally new and interesting horizon in front of me. A very good read.
Mead brilliantly presents the ideological and philosophical framework behind the United States' quest for global leadership, its never-ending foreign and domestic policy dilemma, and the modern implications of what the Founding Fathers and their heirs in office set forth throughout the 19th and 20th centuries. A must-read.
Best book I’ve read in quite some time. WRM takes very complicated subject and presents it in a palatable heuristic to describe the different schools of American foreign policy, without losing the granularity that each school deserves. Top notch job!
This book is the finest perspective on American Foreign Policy I have found in 50+ years of reading. The ideology behind the four classifications is made clear with convincing examples of times of success and failure. Read this book!
For class, we mostly dwelt on the chapters that broke American foreign policy into four different camps: the Hamiltonians, Wilsonians, Jeffersonians, and Jacksonians. As always, I'm a huge fan of categories so this was a very interesting read.
This was an excellent overview of the four dominant schools that have impacted US foreign policy over the past 200 years. Meade seemingly called the populist wave that Trump rode in on back in 2002.
So do I now know the differences between all four schools of thought and what they might suggest were a catastrophic event, like a pandemic outbreak, to occur? No. But I do feel smarter.
Compelling and held my interest to the last page. His observations on Andrew Jackson makes me want to study him further. Most definitely my favorite book on foreign policy to date.
Smartest guy around on foreign policy, so read whatever you can that Mead has written.
He divides foreign policy approaches into:
Hamiltonians - view the global economy on favorable terms, and the national govt. and big business can work together.
Wilsonians - we have a moral obligation and national interest in spreading American values
Jeffersonians - preserve democracy at home and worry less about it abroad, fear both big govt. and big business
Jacksonians - populist focus on physical security and well-being of U.S. citizens
Mead's directive is for us to return to our roots - focus on economic matters, think globally, and understand the relationship between policy and democracy
Interesting explanation of Jacksonians (and I am adding these notes in 2017 after the election of Donald Trump), that rural Jacksonian culture has spread to the suburbs (he calls them crabgrass Jacksonians), and the suburbs themselves are a kind of self-reliance. Jacksonians believe that war should be fought with all available force and with the lowest number of U.S. casualties.
Absolute must read for anyone trying to understand American foreign policy in particular and American politics in general in the age of Trump. It's amazing how Professor Mead managed to predict so much of 2016 in 2001. Indians would do well to rely on this paradigm to understand American foreign policy than the tired old tropes of Democrat and Republican.
Brilliant. Everybody who needs a primer on American foreign policy (and I'd carry this over to domestic policy, too)--whether you're a native or not--should read this book because Dr. Mead, with his four excellent models has explained it beautifully. He takes 98 pages to tee it up (and the introduction definitely holds your attention), then launches into a superb explanation of each model. An intelligent person can find something to embrace and something to send back to the kitchen in each. Hamiltonians love to engage the U.S. in international commerce--I dig it; unfettered capitalism (a la the Friedman school) not so much. A Wilsonian will tell you that the U.S. should back up the UN Declaration on Universal Human Rights, which is a great ideal. Someone who's actually picked up a rifle to defend the U.S. Constitution might be wary about investing a great deal of American blood and treasure in that. I, like the Jeffersonians, love the Bill of Rights. I also don't care if the TSA wants to feel my junk if it keeps the airplane from exploding. I don't think America does itself any favors when the rest of the world perceives us as an abusive redneck; but I do love--like Jacksonians do--the way we will make relentless war all over your ass if you attack us. I think that Dr. Mead, without saying it overtly, has put together a nice smorgasbord of American political ideals for students of U.S. foreign policy and his grasp of U.S. (and British) history makes this easy for him. With all the Carter-bashing we see from the pundit class lately, I was grateful to see someone, for example, point out the way his administration brought the country back from Kissinger's amoral Realpolitik shenanigans (i.e., supporting d-bags like Pinochet) and the return of soft power to the Cold War--which I would argue ultimately enabled the win. Whether you agree with my opinions or not, I think anyone interested in political science and American history should pick this one up.
Mead's book, a review of US foreign policy since the founding, was published months before 9/11 and one might ignore it for that reason. But I found it highly relevant to the current debates on foreign affairs. Mead acknowledges that the US approach to statecraft is not as "sophisticated" as how the Europeans practice it. But, he argues, it has been very successful for the most part. He identifies four stream of foreign policy in the US - Hamiltonian (taking a commercial approach to external affairs), Jeffersonian (staying untangled from problems elsewhere in the world), Wilsonian (solving the world's problems), and Jacksonian (fervently watching out for US position and security). All have had their periods of ascendency and decline.
Perhaps the single best book out there on the theory of American foreign policy. Mead constructs an outline of US strategic culture built around principles of American exceptionalism, historical isolationism, and strong patriotism. Distinguishing four specific subcultures--Hamiltonian, Wilsonian, Jacksonian, and Jeffersonian--that differ only in terms of the relative emphasis they place on these core values, Mead provides an historical explanation of how these schools of thought affect the goals and conduct of US foreign policy. Highly relevant for many of the contemporary discussions concerning America's role in the world.