Dysfunctional Diplomacy: The Politics of International Agreements in an Era of Partisan Polarization

Author:   Jeffrey S. Peake
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9781032389127


Pages:   152
Publication Date:   30 December 2022
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Dysfunctional Diplomacy: The Politics of International Agreements in an Era of Partisan Polarization


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Author:   Jeffrey S. Peake
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
Weight:   0.353kg
ISBN:  

9781032389127


ISBN 10:   1032389125
Pages:   152
Publication Date:   30 December 2022
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations Acknowledgements 1 Introduction 2 Recent Trends in Treaty Politics 3 The Effects of Partisan Polarization on Treaty Politics 4 The United States on the Outside: Multilateral Conventions 5 Executive Agreements: Implementing US Democracy 6 Weak Commitments: The Limits of Presidential Unilateralism 7 Conclusions References

Reviews

"Praise for Dysfunctional Diplomacy: The Politics of International Agreements in an Era of Partisan Polarization Jeffrey Peake usefully demonstrates an important but often overlooked consequence of partisan polarization in Congress: it has rendered the treaty process unworkable. Having no option, presidents rely almost entirely on unilateral tools to make international agreements. This dysfunctional practice has weakened the role of Congress, undermined the country’s international commitments, and decreased America’s influence on international law. George C. Edwards III, Texas A&M University and University of Oxford No one has more thoroughly documented the decline of the U.S. treaty process than Jeffrey Peake. In this important book, Peake integrates and extends his groundbreaking empirical work on increasing presidential unilateralism in the making of international agreements. And he shows how this trend undermines the democratic legitimacy of international law and adversely impacts U.S. foreign policy. Both political scientists and international law scholars will learn a great deal from Dysfunctional Diplomacy. Jack Goldsmith, Harvard University Law School This is one of the most comprehensive and engaging modern accounts of a ""lost art""--the politics of treaty ratification—in an era of deep partisanship and polarization in American politics. The rich data analysis in this book, combined with fascinating case studies of the politics of contemporary treaty ratification and the rise of executive agreements, expose key ingredients in our dysfunctional diplomacy. But they also offer us a way out by exposing critical nodes of resistance and challenge in the process. Jeffrey S. Lantis, The College of Wooster"


Praise for Dysfunctional Diplomacy: The Politics of International Agreements in an Era of Partisan Polarization Jeffrey Peake usefully demonstrates an important but often overlooked consequence of partisan polarization in Congress: it has rendered the treaty process unworkable. Having no option, presidents rely almost entirely on unilateral tools to make international agreements. This dysfunctional practice has weakened the role of Congress, undermined the country's international commitments, and decreased America's influence on international law. George C. Edwards III, Texas A&M University and University of Oxford No one has more thoroughly documented the decline of the U.S. treaty process than Jeffrey Peake. In this important book, Peake integrates and extends his groundbreaking empirical work on increasing presidential unilateralism in the making of international agreements. And he shows how this trend undermines the democratic legitimacy of international law and adversely impacts U.S. foreign policy. Both political scientists and international law scholars will learn a great deal from Dysfunctional Diplomacy. Jack Goldsmith, Harvard University Law School This is one of the most comprehensive and engaging modern accounts of a lost art --the politics of treaty ratification-in an era of deep partisanship and polarization in American politics. The rich data analysis in this book, combined with fascinating case studies of the politics of contemporary treaty ratification and the rise of executive agreements, expose key ingredients in our dysfunctional diplomacy. But they also offer us a way out by exposing critical nodes of resistance and challenge in the process. Jeffrey S. Lantis, The College of Wooster


Author Information

Jeffrey S. Peake is Professor of Political Science at Clemson University, in Clemson, South Carolina, where he teaches courses on US politics, Congress, and U.S. foreign policy.

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