Jimmy Carter, Human Rights, and the National Agenda - Couverture rigide

Livre 18 sur 23: Presidential Rhetoric and Political Communication
 
9781603440745: Jimmy Carter, Human Rights, and the National Agenda

Synopsis

Though Jimmy Carter is widely viewed as one of the least effective modern presidents, the human rights agenda for which his administration is known remains high in the national awareness and continues to provide important justifications for presidential and congressional action a quarter-century later. The very elements of Carter's communications on human rights that engendered obstacles to the formation of a coherent and consistent policy--the term's vagueness, the difficulties of applying it, its uneasy relationship with national security interests, and the divergence between Democratic and Republican understandings--allowed "human rights" to become a useful rubric for presidents, both Democratic and Republican, who followed Carter. Stuckey discusses the key elements of how human rights came to the nation's attention.

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À propos de l?auteur

MARY E. STUCKEY, professor of communication and political science at Georgia State University, is also the author of Slipping the Surly Bonds: Reagan's Challenger Address, published in 2006 by Texas A&M University Press. Her Ph.D. is from the University of Notre Dame.

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