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Empire Trap
The Rise and Fall of U.S. Intervention to Protect American Property Overseas, 1893-2013
von Noel Maurer
Verlag: Princeton University Press
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Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM


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ISBN: 978-1-4008-4660-3
Erschienen am 25.08.2013
Sprache: Englisch
Umfang: 568 Seiten

Preis: 44,49 €

44,49 €
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Inhaltsverzeichnis
Klappentext
Biografische Anmerkung


Acknowledgments vii
One Introduction 1
Two Avoiding the Trap 25
Three Setting the Trap 58
Four The Trap Closes 89


  • Box 1. The Mexican Exception 137


Five Banana Republicanism 148
Six Escaping by Accident 188
Seven Falling Back In 245
Eight The Empire Trap and the Cold War 313

  • Box 2. Ethiopia and Nicaragua 347


Nine The Success of the Empire Trap 350
Ten Escaping by Design? 387
Eleven The Empire Trap in the Twenty-first
Century 433
Notes 453
Index 537



How the United States became an imperial power by bowing to pressure to defend its citizens' overseas investments
Throughout the twentieth century, the U.S. government willingly deployed power, hard and soft, to protect American investments all around the globe. Why did the United States get into the business of defending its citizens' property rights abroad? The Empire Trap looks at how modern U.S. involvement in the empire business began, how American foreign policy became increasingly tied to the sway of private financial interests, and how postwar administrations finally extricated the United States from economic interventionism, even though the government had the will and power to continue.
Noel Maurer examines the ways that American investors initially influenced their government to intercede to protect investments in locations such as Central America and the Caribbean. Costs were small-at least at the outset-but with each incremental step, American policy became increasingly entangled with the goals of those they were backing, making disengagement more difficult. Maurer discusses how, all the way through the 1970s, the United States not only failed to resist pressure to defend American investments, but also remained unsuccessful at altering internal institutions of other countries in order to make property rights secure in the absence of active American involvement. Foreign nations expropriated American investments, but in almost every case the U.S. government's employment of economic sanctions or covert action obtained market value or more in compensation-despite the growing strategic risks. The advent of institutions focusing on international arbitration finally gave the executive branch a credible political excuse not to act. Maurer cautions that these institutions are now under strain and that a collapse might open the empire trap once more.
With shrewd and timely analysis, this book considers American patterns of foreign intervention and the nation's changing role as an imperial power.



Noel Maurer is associate professor of business administration at Harvard Business School. He is the author of The Power and the Money and coauthor of The Politics of Property Rights, Mexico since 1980, and The Big Ditch (Princeton).