U.S. Foreign Policy After the Cold War : 95 Things Parents Can Do! / edited by Randall B. Ripley and James M. Lindsay
Bibliographic record and links to related information available from the Library of Congress catalog

Preface
Part I. Introduction
1 Change and United States Foreign Policy Bureaucracy
James M. Lindsay and Randall B. Ripley
Part II. Institutions
2 The Presidency and Bureaucratic Change After the Cold War
Bert A. Rockman
3 The National Security Council System After the Cold War
Vincent A. Auger
4 The State Department Complex After the Cold War
James M. Lindsay
5 When the Bear Leaves the Woods: Department of Defense Reorganization in the Post-Cold War Era
Paul N. Stockton
6 Reinventing the CIA: Strategic Intelligence and the End of the Cold War
Loch K. Johnson
7 The Threat of Soviet Decline: The CIA, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and the End of the Cold War
Kimberly Marten Zisk
Part III. Policies
8 Grand Strategy
Peter Hahn
9 Security Assistance Policy After the Cold War
Duncan L. Clarke and Daniel O'Connor
10 Commercializing Foreign Affairs? American Trade Policy After the Cold War
Pietro S. Nivola
11 Human Rights Policy: Change and Continuity
David P. Forsythe
12 American Public Opinion and the Use of Force: Change or Continuity in the Post-Cold War World?
Richard K. Herrmann and Shannon Peterson
Part IV. Conclusion
13 Promise Versus Reality: Continuity and Change After the Cold War
Randall B. Ripley and James M. Lindsay
Notes
References
Index
Contributors