Tony Smith is Cornelia M. Jackson Professor of Political Science at Tufts University and Senior Research Associate at the Center for European Studies at Harvard University. His other works include Thinking Like a Communist: State and Legitimacy in the Soviet Union, China, and Cuba and The Pattern of Imperialism: The United States, Great Britain, and the Late-Industrializing World since 1815.
"[Smith's] account of the 20th century is just about as close to
unputdownable as it gets in the genre of political history, and
ends up advocating what seems to be an appropriate level of
optimism for what remains, after all, a terrifying and chaotic
world."
*Washington Post*
"America's Mission provides a comprehensive historical review of
the record of American liberal internationalism. Tony Smith argues
persuasively that liberal internationalism is not a cultural quirk
of unsophisticated Americans. Rather, it has built on powerful
global historical trends. The liberal internationalist streak in
American foreign policy has, in turn, been responsible for shaping
a liberal world order conducive to American security and economic
interests."---Francis Fukuyama, New Republic
"This work, formidable in scope and scholarship, is a rousing
defense of liberal Wilsonian internationalism. . . . [Smith's]
historical account [of attempts to implant democracy] is
accompanied by a sophisticated analysis of the perspectives on
democratization of Marxists, comparativists, and realists, who hold
respectively, says the author, that the United States will not,
cannot, and should not promote democracy worldwide."---David C.
Hendrickson, Foreign Affairs
"Smith elegantly ties explanation of the past to prescription for
the future. No other contemporary political scientist . . . has
connected those two dimensions to this subject so well."---Mark P.
Lagon, Perspectives on Political Science
"America's Mission is a book with a mission. It's aim . . . is
nothing less than to overthrow the hitherto dominant theory dealing
with American foreign affairs and to put in its place a different
one."---Theodore Draper, New York Review of Books
"This contentious study of US foreign policy is sure to generate
new debates about the ideals and realities that inspire and
legitimize US foreign policy."
*Choice*
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