善隣外交の形成と展開 : 史学史的考察

広島平和科学 Volume 19 Page 53-72 published_at 1996
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Title ( jpn )
善隣外交の形成と展開 : 史学史的考察
Title ( eng )
The origins and evolution of the good neighbor policy : An historiographical overview
Creator
Kamimura Naoki
Source Title
広島平和科学
Hiroshima Peace Science
Volume 19
Start Page 53
End Page 72
Journal Identifire
[PISSN] 0386-3565
[EISSN] 2434-9135
[NCID] AN00213938
Abstract
This essay is a brief historiographical analysis of Franklin D. Roosevelt's Good Neighbor policy as revealed by generations of studies on the subject. The essay points out three schools, orthodox, realist, and revisionist, and discusses how their respective explanations contributed to our understanding of the policy. The focus is particularly on the second and the third schools, which present often mutually conflicting interpretations regarding motives and consequences of the Good Neighbor policy. While the former emphasizes the constraints policy makers faced and the difficult search they were engaged in for formulating an effective policy, the latter focues on economic motives behind the policy and the subsequently established unequal relationship in favor of the United States. As a way for bridging the gap between the two interpretations, the paper points out the importance for U.S. policy makers of establishing or at least partially preserving a liberal Wilsonian order in the Western Hemisphere in the increasingly closed world of power politics and 'radical' economic nationalism in the 1930s. For some influential U.S. leaders, the paper suggests, particularly Cordell Hull and his State Department subordinates, such goals were integral part of their conception and implementation of the Good Neighbor policy.
NDC
Peace Science [ 319 ]
Language
jpn
Resource Type departmental bulletin paper
Publisher
広島大学平和科学研究センター
Date of Issued 1996
Publish Type Version of Record
Access Rights open access
Source Identifier
[ISSN] 0386-3565
[NCID] AN00213938