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Foreign Policy Motivation
In: Foreign affairs: an American quarterly review, Band 55, Heft 4, S. 901
ISSN: 2327-7793
Basic Motivations of China's Foreign Policy
In: China report: a journal of East Asian studies = Zhong guo shu yi, Band 4, Heft 4, S. 6-13
ISSN: 0973-063X
Hungarian domestic policy in foreign policy
In: International issues & Slovak foreign policy affairs, Band 16, Heft 2, S. 46-64
ISSN: 1337-5482
World Affairs Online
Domestic Bases of Foreign Policy
In: International Relations Theory and South Asia, S. 260-288
Domestic Sources of Foreign Policy
In: Presidential studies quarterly, Band 24, Heft 1, S. 153-154
ISSN: 0360-4918
Ashok Sharma, India's Pursuit of Energy Security: Domestic Measures, Foreign Policy and Geopolitics
In: International studies, Band 58, Heft 4, S. 535-538
ISSN: 0973-0702, 1939-9987
Domestic Politics and Foreign Policy
In: Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Politics
"Domestic Politics and Foreign Policy" published on by Oxford University Press.
Domestic Sources of US Foreign Policy
In: The Uncertain Superpower, S. 57-66
FOREIGN POLICY AND DOMESTIC SCANDAL
In: The national interest, Band 54, S. 27-31
ISSN: 0884-9382
THE SCANDALS DOGGING PRESIDENT BILL CLINTON, AND THE IMPEACHMENT PROCESS HAVE NOT ENTIRELY RUN THEIR COURSE--AND THERE HAS ALREADY BEEN A DISCERNIBLE IMPACT ON FOREIGN POLICY. THE PROBLEMS, OR POTENTIAL PROBLEMS, THAT RESULT CAN BE GROUPED INTO FOUR CATEGORIES: FOREIGN PERCEPTIONS, DISTORTIONS OF U.S. POLICY-MAKING, PRESIDENTIAL DISTRACTION, AND EXECUTIVE-LEGISLATIVE RELATIONS. THIS ARTICLE DISCUSSES EACH OF THESE FOUR CATEGORIES AND CONCLUDES THAT AN ADMINISTRATION THAT IS ACCIDENT-PRONE BECAUSE OF FUNDAMENTAL FLAWS IN ITS APPROACH TO THE WORLD IS LIKELY TO FACE GROWING CONGRESSIONAL PRESSURES, SCANDAL OR NO.
Drivers and Motivations of Qatari Foreign Policy
In: Qatar and the Arab Spring, S. 67-96
Domestic Roots of India's Foreign Policy
In: International studies, Band 24, Heft 2, S. 145-150
ISSN: 0973-0702, 1939-9987
Foreign Policy Determinants: Comparing Realist and Domestic-Political Models of Foreign Policy
In: Conflict management and peace science: the official journal of the Peace Science Society (International), Band 22, Heft 2, S. 149-163
ISSN: 1549-9219
Systemic realist arguments of foreign policy decision-making suggest that partisan disagreement stops at the water's edge. A domestic-politics model of foreign policy decision-making posits that politics does not stop at the water's edge. Extant research on foreign policy voting in the U.S. Congress is consistent with the systemic realist argument. According to this research, partisan voting is less likely to occur on national security, or high-politics issues, than on low-politics issues. I argue that this research suffers from two flaws. First, it does not measure high-politics in accordance with systemic realist thinking. Second, the goal in addressing the water's-edge question is not to learn if a specific variable, such as high-politics, is significant, but to compare competing models. To this end, it is necessary to engage in a "three-cornered fight" and conduct a nonnested model discrimination test. After creating a new measure of high-politics, I compare a systemic realist model against a domestic-politics model of foreign policy voting in the House of Representatives from 1953—2000. The model discrimination test indicates that the domestic-politics model outperforms the systemic realist model. Institutional dynamics and public opinion are more important for understanding foreign policy voting than are more traditional realist variables.
Domestic Public Diplomacy, Domestic Diplomacy, and Domestic Foreign Policy
In: The Transformation of Foreign Policy, S. 263-282