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Table of Contents
Preface; Contents; Abbreviations; List of Figures; Chapter 1 Reconnecting the Past and Present; Problems of Public Diplomacy; Conceptual; What Is Public Diplomacy; What is Diplomacy?; What is Propaganda?; Ideological; US Diplomacy & Foreign Relations; The City on the Hill; Organizational; Public Diplomacy as a Mechanism of Statecraft; Analyzing the Past for Answers; Chapter 2 America's First Public Diplomat; International Public Opinion of British America and the New World; Diplomacy & Foreign Relations of Revolution; French Position Toward British Colonies; Benjamin Franklin Listens.
The Republic of Letters & Exchange Diplomacy18th Century Advocacy; The War of Independence and Public Diplomacy; Chapter 3 Public Diplomacy of the Union; The Importance of British Public Opinion; Conflicting Understandings of the Civil War; The Union's View of Public Opinion; The Weed Mission and the Trent Crisis; British Public Opinion and the Slavery Question; Aid as Foreign Public Engagement; Union Statecraft and Foreign Public Engagement; Chapter 4 Early Public-Private Partnerships for Public Diplomacy; Clara Barton and the International Red Cross; The Cuba Question.
Using Foreign Public Engagement to Manage CrisisHumanitarian Aid as Public Diplomacy; US Public Diplomacy, Humanitarian Aid, and Public-Private Partnerships; Origins of the Pan American Union; Inter-American Conferences; Andrew Carnegie and the Pan American Union; Introducing a Diplomatic Initiative: Education Exchanges; Implementing Exchange Diplomacy; Public Diplomacy and Public-Private Partnerships; Chapter 5 America's First Public Diplomacy Agency?; Avoiding the "P" Word; From Neutral to Belligerent; Forming America's First Information Agency; Listening in Wartime.
War Aims, Plans for Peace, and AdvocacyWartime Exchanges; Psychological Warfare and the German Public; US Public Diplomacy and the Legacy of WWI Propaganda; Chapter 6 InterWar Public Diplomacy; US Internationalism and Foreign Public Engagement; League of Nations and US Policy; The Good Neighbor Policy and Foreign Public Engagement; Private Foreign Public Engagement and US Interests; Public and Private Listening; Private Advocacy and Public Advocacy; Public and Private Exchanges; InterWar Public Diplomacy and US Statecraft; Chapter 7 Public Diplomacy in Chaos and Ambiguity.
Finding a Place for Cultural Relations in the US GovernmentA Profusion of Information Agencies; Listening with the OWI, CIAA, and the Division of Cultural Relations; War, Foreign Policy, and Advocacy; Exchange Diplomacy and Competing Priorities; Cultural Diplomacy and War; International Broadcasting and the Purpose of Information; Propaganda Versus Psychological Warfare; Postwar and Incorporating Public Diplomacy into US Statecraft; Foreign Public Engagement: A Constitutive Element of Foreign Affairs; Chapter 8 Foreign Public Engagement: An American Tradition in Context.
The Republic of Letters & Exchange Diplomacy18th Century Advocacy; The War of Independence and Public Diplomacy; Chapter 3 Public Diplomacy of the Union; The Importance of British Public Opinion; Conflicting Understandings of the Civil War; The Union's View of Public Opinion; The Weed Mission and the Trent Crisis; British Public Opinion and the Slavery Question; Aid as Foreign Public Engagement; Union Statecraft and Foreign Public Engagement; Chapter 4 Early Public-Private Partnerships for Public Diplomacy; Clara Barton and the International Red Cross; The Cuba Question.
Using Foreign Public Engagement to Manage CrisisHumanitarian Aid as Public Diplomacy; US Public Diplomacy, Humanitarian Aid, and Public-Private Partnerships; Origins of the Pan American Union; Inter-American Conferences; Andrew Carnegie and the Pan American Union; Introducing a Diplomatic Initiative: Education Exchanges; Implementing Exchange Diplomacy; Public Diplomacy and Public-Private Partnerships; Chapter 5 America's First Public Diplomacy Agency?; Avoiding the "P" Word; From Neutral to Belligerent; Forming America's First Information Agency; Listening in Wartime.
War Aims, Plans for Peace, and AdvocacyWartime Exchanges; Psychological Warfare and the German Public; US Public Diplomacy and the Legacy of WWI Propaganda; Chapter 6 InterWar Public Diplomacy; US Internationalism and Foreign Public Engagement; League of Nations and US Policy; The Good Neighbor Policy and Foreign Public Engagement; Private Foreign Public Engagement and US Interests; Public and Private Listening; Private Advocacy and Public Advocacy; Public and Private Exchanges; InterWar Public Diplomacy and US Statecraft; Chapter 7 Public Diplomacy in Chaos and Ambiguity.
Finding a Place for Cultural Relations in the US GovernmentA Profusion of Information Agencies; Listening with the OWI, CIAA, and the Division of Cultural Relations; War, Foreign Policy, and Advocacy; Exchange Diplomacy and Competing Priorities; Cultural Diplomacy and War; International Broadcasting and the Purpose of Information; Propaganda Versus Psychological Warfare; Postwar and Incorporating Public Diplomacy into US Statecraft; Foreign Public Engagement: A Constitutive Element of Foreign Affairs; Chapter 8 Foreign Public Engagement: An American Tradition in Context.