
A concise yet penetrating analysis of how modern American presidents have--and have not--incorporated ethics into their foreign policy.Americans constantly make moral judgments about presidents and foreign policy. Unfortunately, many of these assessments are poorly thought through. In Do Morals Matter?, Joseph S. Nye, Jr. provides a concise yet penetrating analysis of the role of ethics in US foreign policy since Franklin Delano Roosevelt's presidency onward. Nye works through each presidency from FDR to Trump and scores their foreign policy on three ethical dimensions: their intentions, the means they used, and the consequences of their decisions. He also evaluates their leadership qualities, elaborating on which approaches work and which ones do not. Regardless of a president's policy preference, Nye shows that each one was not fully constrained by the structure of the system and actually had choices. Since we so often apply moral reasoning to foreign policy, Nye suggests how to do it better. Most importantly, he shows that presidents need to factor in both the political context and the availability of resources when deciding how to implement an ethical policy-especially in a future international system that presents not only great power competition from China and Russia, but a host of additional transnational threats.
Do morals matter in the execution of American foreign policy, and how can ethical frameworks be applied to presidential decision-making? Joseph S. Nye, Jr., a distinguished scholar of international relations and former dean of the Harvard Kennedy School, utilizes his extensive expertise in power dynamics to evaluate the ethical performance of U.S. presidents from FDR to Trump. He proposes a tripartite framework—intentions, means, and consequences—to assess how leaders navigate the tension between moral ideals and the constraints of the international system.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this work as a significant contribution to the study of political realism and liberal institutionalism. Readers frequently note the clarity of the prose and the utility of the author's evaluative framework for analyzing contemporary geopolitical challenges.
Page Count:
268
Publication Date:
2019-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190935987
ISBN-13:
9780190935986
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