Foreign Policy Blogs

GREAT POWERS: America and the World After Bush

It just so happens that today – the day our blog went live – a book on the issue of rising powers and the place of the United States in the world got featured in the New York Times.  The book is Great Powers: America and the World After Bush by Thomas P. M. Barnett.  Dwight Garner’s review isn’t a wholehearted endorsement, but it does recommend it as an interesting read.  Great Powers sets the US as a key promoter of “enlightened globalization”, serving as an example for rising powers while retaining its hegemonic status.  Barnett compares some of the US rising power adversaries to “younger versions” of the American state.  While this analogy might not hold water, it is an interesting take on the current situation and worth returning to in the future.

Great Powers: America and the World After Bush: by Thomas P. M. Barnett.  Credit: New York Times.

Great Powers: America and the World After Bush: by Thomas P. M. Barnett. Credit: New York Times.

If any readers have read the book, please leave a comment.


 

Author

Christopher Herbert

Christopher Herbert is an analyst of foreign affairs with specific expertise in US foreign policy, the Middle East and Asia. He is Director of Research for the Denver Research Group, has written for the Washington Post’s PostGlobal and Global Power Barometer and has served on projects for the United States Pacific Command and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency. He has degrees from Yale University and Harvard University in Middle Eastern history and politics and speaks English, French, Arabic and Italian.

Area of Focus
US Foreign Policy; Middle East; Asia.

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