Introduction: The Man, or the Moment?, by Jonathan R. Hunt
Part One: Global and Domestic Issues
1. Ronald Reagan
and the Cold War, by Melvyn P. Leffler
2. Energy and the End of the Evil Empire, by David Painter
3. Reagan and the Evolution of US Counterterrorism, by Christopher
Fuller
4. Global Reaganomics: Budget Deficits,Capital Flows, and the
International Economy, by Michael De Groot
Part Two: Western and Eastern Europe
5. Confronting the
Soviet Threat: Reagan's Approach to Policymaking, by Elizabeth
Charles and James Wilson
6. Once More, with Feeling: Transatlantic Relations in the Reagan
Years, by Susan Colbourn and Mathias Haeussler
7. Ronald Reagan and the Nuclear Freeze Movement, by Stephanie
Freeman
Part Three: Human Rights and Domestic Politics
8.
Rhetoric and Restraint: Ronald Reagan and the Vietnam Syndrome, by
Mark Atwood Lawrence
9. Compartmentalizing US Foreign Policy: Human Rights in the Reagan
Years, by Sarah Snyder
10. Between Values and Action: Religious Rhetoric, Human Rights,
and Reagan's Foreign Policy, by Lauren Frances Turek
Part Four: Latin America
11. Reframing Human Rights:
Reagan's "Project Democracy" and the US Intervention in Nicaragua,
by William Michael Schmidli
12. Reagan and Pinochet's Chile: The Diplomacy of Disillusion, by
Evan D. McCormick
13. Anticommunism, Trade, and Debt: The Reagan Administration and
Brazil, 1981–1989, by James Cameron
Part Five: The Middle East and Africa
14. The Limits of
Triumphalism in the Middle East: Israel, the Palestinian Question,
and Lebanon in the Age of Reagan, by Seth Anziska
15. The Central Front of Reagan's Cold War: The United States and
Afghanistan, by Robert Rakove
16. The Reagan Administration and the Cold War Endgame in the
Periphery: The Case of Southern Africa, by Flavia Gasbarri
Part Six: South and East Asia
17. Reagan and the Crisis
of Southwest Asia, by Elisabeth Mariko Leake
18. Adam Smith's Arthritis: Japan and the Fears of American
Decline, by Jennifer Miller
19. One World, Two Chinas: Dreams of Capitalist Convergence in East
Asia, by Jonathan R. Hunt
Conclusion: Reagan Reconsidered, by Simon Miles
Jonathan R. Hunt is Assistant Professor of Strategy at the US
Air War College. Follow him on X @JRHunTx
Simon Miles is Assistant Professor in the Sanford School of Public
Policy at Duke University. He is author of Engaging the Evil
Empire.
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