
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Dale Copeland, professor of international relations at the University of Virginia and author of the new book A World Safe for Commerce: American Foreign Policy From the Revolution to the Rise of China, talks about his "dynamic realism" theory of great power war and peace, emphasizing the critical causal role of future trade expectations. Copeland discusses case studies from the American Revolutionary War to the Spanish-American War and the beginnings of the Cold War and then applies his theory to U.S.-China relations across a range of policy areas, with important insights into how to avert a catastrophic war.
Show Notes
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
4.4
9090 ratings
Dale Copeland, professor of international relations at the University of Virginia and author of the new book A World Safe for Commerce: American Foreign Policy From the Revolution to the Rise of China, talks about his "dynamic realism" theory of great power war and peace, emphasizing the critical causal role of future trade expectations. Copeland discusses case studies from the American Revolutionary War to the Spanish-American War and the beginnings of the Cold War and then applies his theory to U.S.-China relations across a range of policy areas, with important insights into how to avert a catastrophic war.
Show Notes
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
117 Listeners
964 Listeners
1,087 Listeners
987 Listeners
29 Listeners
605 Listeners
143 Listeners
1,505 Listeners
700 Listeners
415 Listeners
196 Listeners
693 Listeners
137 Listeners
412 Listeners
417 Listeners
257 Listeners
99 Listeners