July 2008

We greatly appreciate all of the wonderful postings this week on America Between the Wars and thank all of those who participated. We wanted to conclude by touching on two of the issues raised in the discussion. One is the question Matt Waxman raised concerning the future of the U.S. political debate about democracy promotion. The other...

Thanks to everyone for what has been a very enriching discussion so far. I’d like to respond briefly to the thoughtful comments made by Peggy and Chris concerning what the story of these modern interwar years between 11/9 and 9/11 tells us about how to think about America’s role in the world – and whether that can be summed...

Every week, an Australian show called The Gruen Transfer asks two advertising companies to compete with each other to sell the unsellable. This week's challenge: create a TV ad to whip up support in Oz for a military invasion of New Zealand. One of the ads is okay — but this one had me laughing so hard there...

Shameless plug alert: I have posted a new essay on SSRN, "The Cognitive Psychology of Mens Rea." It's a sequel of sorts to my essay "The Cognitive Psychology of Circumstantial Evidence," which appeared last year in the Michigan Law Review. Here is the abstract:"Actus non facit reum nisi mens sit rea" -- the act does not make a...

I'm afraid I haven't been holding up my end of this discussion very well because it turned out that I am traveling to Europe just as things got underway. I'm here in Paris for some meetings that include some very serious intellectual-activist-elites from across Europe. A very distinguished group of people, and I feel a bit of a...

Let me raise the uncomfortable subject of the Clinton Administration's commitment to international law. Chollet and Goldgeier offer three episodes that I think shed light on President Clinton’s commitment to international law and the use of force. First, with the Rwandan genocide, Clinton failed to intervene in Rwanda or even treat the situation seriously. Tony Lake described...

This deeply unsettling experiment starts on a typical Monday morning on Manhattan's leafy Upper West Side, where commuters stroll by Starbucks and Central Park. At 7:10 a.m., I'm off to see how long it takes to buy a child slave.So begins a report by ABC's Nightline. By 5:00 pm the journalist is in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, and he has made a...

More than a year ago the University of Virginia's Miller Center of Public Affairs convened a National War Powers Commission, which today unanimously issued its report on improving future relations between the Executive and Legislature when it comes to involving U.S. forces in conflict. The bipartisan Commission was chaired by Former Secretaries of State James A. Baker III and...

Man, what kind of sweatshop is the University of Chicago?From 1992 until his election to the U.S. Senate in 2004, Barack Obama served as a professor in the Law School. He was a Lecturer from 1992 to 1996. He was a Senior Lecturer from 1996 to 2004, during which time he taught three courses per year. Senior Lecturers are considered...

Following up on my previous post, and as Peggy pointed out, one of the themes in America Between the Wars is the struggle to “define the era” since the fall of the Berlin Wall and to provide a grand strategy, much in the same way as George Kennan’s “X” article had provided the intellectual underpinnings for the policy of containment...

One theme running throughout America Between the Wars is constant debate and struggle regarding the proper role of democracy promotion in U.S. foreign policy. A tension over pushing democratic reform has long existed within both American liberalism and conservatism, and pervades each presidential administration discussed in the book. My question is: where will the next president take it? Chollet...

Thanks to Roger Alford, Matt Waxman, Ken Anderson, Chris Borgen, and Peggy McGuiness for their interesting posts today. I wanted to respond to Roger’s very astute observation about 1993. We do write about the disaster on the national security side, but as he notes, Clinton also got NAFTA passed that year, which was a major achievement. It was really...