商品詳細

img

Tip-toeing through the Tulips with Congress: How Congressional Attention Constrains Covert Action.

・ISBN 978-1-009-59800-2 hard GB£ 55.00

¥15,488.- (税込) *

・ISBN 978-1-009-59799-9 paper GB£ 18.00

¥5,068.- (税込) *

・ISBN 978-1-009-59801-9 eBook

大学・機関向け

KPESSサイトへ

著者・編者 Nedal, Dani Kaufmann / Schramm, Madison V.,
シリーズ (Elements in International Relations)
出版社 (Cambridge U. Pr., UK)
出版年 2024
ページ数 75 pp.
ニュース番号 <737-934>

Over the years, the US has intervened covertly in many countries to remove dictators, subvert elected leaders, and support coups. Explanations for this focus on characteristics of target countries or strategic incentives to pursue regime change. This Element provides an account of domestic political factors constraining US presidents' authorization of covert foreign-imposed regime change operations (FIRCs), arguing that congressional attention to covert action alters the Executive's calculus by increasing the political costs associated with this secretive policy instrument. It shows that congressional attention is the result of institutional battles over abuses of executive authority and has a significant constraining effect independent of codified rules and partisan disputes. These propositions are tested using content analysis of the Congressional Record, statistical analysis of Cold War covert FIRCs, and causal-process evidence relating to covert interventions in Chile, Angola, Central America, Afghanistan, etc.