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Architects
of Globalism
Building a New World Order during WWII
Patrick
J. Hearden
The political and economic origins of the world we live in
Architects of Globalism provides the first comprehensive analysis
of American Blueprints for the reconstruction of the world after the
defeat of Hitler and his allies. Working closely with Roosevelt and
Truman, State Department officials assumed primary responsibility
for drafting these plans. Hearden shows that bitter rivalries frequently
divided these officials, but that there was remarkable agreement among
them on fundamental principles. These architects of globalism sought
to create a liberal capitalist world system, in which foreign markets
would absorb the surplus products of American farms and factories
so that the United States would be able to maintain high levels of
employment without further government intervention in the economy.
Hearden shows these men contending with the vital issues of the
day: decolonization and the dismantling of empires, relations with
the Soviet Union, the formation of the United Nations, the economic
reconstruction of war-torn countries, the forging of new relations
with Germany and Japan, the twin problems of Palestine and petroleum.
Based on extensive new research in primary sources from policymakers'
private letters and personal diaries to official correspondence
this exciting book documents the formation of the postwar
world.
"Hearden's book is the best in the field. [It] is impressively
researched and is comprehensive in dealing with nearly every aspect
of State Department wartime planning for the postwar world. . .
. Hearden presents a well-documented account of the . . . drive
for open doors, free markets, and a re-unified world economy. .
. . Hearden has mastered, as no one else has, the intricacies of
U.S. policies and local issues in nearly every part of the world.
. . . It will make a splash among historians. "
Frank Costigliola
professor of history at the University of Connecticut
"The book's strengths are an immense amount of research in U.S. records
[and] a clear and direct writing style. . . . I know of no other work that gets
the most important postwar planning in one place, sets up a context, and is based
on this kind of research in American sources. [This book] should become a reference
work for scholars."
Walter LaFeber
The Andrew and James Tisch Distinguished Professor of History at Cornell University
2002
6"x9"
400 pages
20 photos
$45.00, cloth (s)
978-1-55728-730-4 | 1-55728-730-9
Patrick J. Hearden is an associate professor of history at Purdue
University. His books include The Tragedy of Vietnam (HarperCollins,
1991) and Roosevelt Confronts Hitler: America's Entry into World War
Two (Northern Illinois, 1982).
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