| WORLD
POLICY JOURNAL
AGENDA FOR
THE YEAR 2000
With a presidential
election forthcoming at the turn of a new millennium, we at World Policy
Journal consider this to be a good time to review the strengths and weaknesses
of the American foreign policy agenda. We have asked a number of prominent
specialists--journalists and academicians--to take a look at our current
global policies and assess what has gone right and what has gone wrong
in the past decade or so, and to recommend new ideas and programs that
ought to be given consideration by our leaders in the years ahead.
Given our progressive
viewpoint here at World Policy Journal (and at the World Policy Institute,
which publishes the Journal), we are deeply interested not only in security
issues but in the social and ethical implications of America's overseas
engagement. We try to focus broadly in both our editorial and research
work on a number of critical norms and values in international society:
the preservation of democratic beliefs; the protection of civil rights;
the advancement of tolerance, fairness, and the rule of law; and the support
of capitalism tempered by social justice.
We have asked
our contributors to address the central questions of our age in light of
these standards, namely: what constitutes a good society; how effective
is foreign assistance; what role should human rights play in formulating
policy; how should a sole superpower function on the world stage; what
are America's interests and obligations in its own hemisphere; what are
our most important interests; what should America's role be with respect
to global organizations and international law; and who will be our most
likely competitors and allies in the first decades of the next century.
Our symposium
is organized in three sections. The first examines America's grand strategy
for the twenty-first century, with articles by James Chace and Nicholas
X. Rizopoulos, David P. Calleo, and Charles A. Kupchan. The second focuses
on America's long-term values and interests, with essays by David Rieff,
Ethan B. Kapstein, Karl E. Meyer, and Jeff Madrick. The third looks at
America's future relations with the emerging regions of the world, with
articles by Kenneth Maxwell and Armando Bravo Martinez.
We have undertaken
this project in a nonpartisan spirit and in the hope that America's political
leaders, its elected representatives, and others involved with global affairs
will find in the essays that follow innovative and commonsense ideas that
can serve as the foundation for new thinking in their approaches to American
foreign policy.
Stephen Schlesinger
Publisher,
World Policy Journal
Director,
World Policy Institute |