TABLE OF CONTENTS

Volume 46, Issue 2-3 (March 2009)

Special Issue:
Beyond Bush: A New Era in US Foreign Policy?

Guest Editors:
Timothy J. Lynch and Trevor B. McCrisken

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Introduction

Beyond Bush: A new era in US foreign policy?

Timothy J Lynch and Trevor B McCrisken

Int Polit 46: 115-118; doi:10.1057/ip.2008.43

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Original Articles

I. Primacy?

Persistent primacy and the future of the American era

Robert J Lieber

Int Polit 46: 119-139; doi:10.1057/ip.2008.44

From Pax Romana to Pax Americana? The history and future of the new American Empire

Mark T Berger

Int Polit 46: 140-156; doi:10.1057/ip.2008.48

II. A Neoconservative Revolution that wasn't

Is the Bush Revolution over?

Steven Hurst

Int Polit 46: 157-176; doi:10.1057/ip.2008.42

Foreign policy fusion: Liberal interventionists, conservative nationalists and neoconservatives — the new alliance dominating the US foreign policy establishment

Inderjeet Parmar

Int Polit 46: 177-209; doi:10.1057/ip.2008.47

III. Whither The Bush Doctrine?

Out of sync: Bush's expanded national security state and the war on terror

Robert G Patman

Int Polit 46: 210-233; doi:10.1057/ip.2008.46

Geopolitics, the revolution in military affairs and the Bush doctrine

Simon Dalby

Int Polit 46: 234-252; doi:10.1057/ip.2008.40

IV. US Foreign Policy in Practice

Coming face to face with bloody reality: Liberal common sense and the ideological failure of the Bush doctrine in Iraq FREE

Toby Dodge

Int Polit 46: 253-275; doi:10.1057/ip.2008.41

The North–South divide and security in the Western Hemisphere: United States–South American relations after September 11 and the Iraq war

Mario E Carranza

Int Polit 46: 276-297; doi:10.1057/ip.2008.38

Neoconservative democratization in theory and practice: Developing democrats or raising radical Islamists?

Matthew Crosston

Int Polit 46: 298-326; doi:10.1057/ip.2008.39

V. Bush-Cheney Redux

Bush–Cheney Redux

Linda B Miller

Int Polit 46: 327-333; doi:10.1057/ip.2008.45