Lexington Books
Pages: 298
Trim: 6 x 9
978-0-7391-1024-9 • Hardback • September 2005 • $110.00 • (£85.00)
978-0-7391-1241-0 • Paperback • September 2005 • $50.99 • (£39.00)
Michele Zebich-Knos is professor in the Department of Political Science and International Affairs at Kennesaw State University. Heather N. Nichol is director of the Center for Canadian Studies at the University of West Georgia.
Chapter 1 Isolate or Engage?: Divergent Approaches to Foreign Policy Toward Cuba
Chapter 2 U.S. Policy toward Cuba: Trends and Transformation During the George W. Bush Administration
Chapter 3 The US-Cuba Standoff: A Double Con?
Chapter 4 Canada-Cuba Relations: Old Wine in New Bottles?
Chapter 5 From Reasonable Steadiness to "from Crisis to Crisis": Mexico-Cuba Relations in the Post-Cold War Era
Chapter 6 Cuba-CARICOM Relations Since 1972: Challenge and Change in Regional Cooperation
Chapter 7 Carribean Community and Cuba Relations: Thirty Years Revisited
Chapter 8 The Exile Ideology: Popular Culture and Boundary Maintenance in the Cuban Enclave
Chapter 9 From Miami With Love: Transnational Political Activism in the Cuban Exile Community
Chapter 10 The Cuba-United States Conflict: Notes for Reflection of the War Against Terrorism
Chapter 11 Civil Society in Contemporary Cuba: U.S. Policy and the Cuban Reality
Chapter 12 "Venceremos!" Castro's Discourse on Cuba's Foreign Policy
Chapter 13 A Clash of Perspectives?: Some Conclusions About the "Cuba Problem"
Since Castro's revolution, the United States has tried to overthrow, isolate, or undermine Cuba, while Canada, Mexico, and the Caribbean have preferred engagement. Michele Zebich-Knos and Heather Nicol have assembled a superb group of scholars to describe the domestic causes and evaluate the international effects of these different approaches. This is an important book that takes a new approach to an old problem and emerges with a curious conclusion: neither confrontation nor engagement has worked.
— Robert A. Pastor, professor and director of the Center for North American Studies, American University
The editors have assembled an extremely qualified group of scholars in the rich field of Cuban studies. Their treatments are balanced and authoritative and go beyond the Havana-Washington axis to cover the whole hemisphere. No other source provides such an exhaustive account of how Cuban-U.S. relations became and remain so contentious.
— Michael L. Conniff, Director of Global Studies at San José State University
Much of it is useful, perceptive and timely, and the best of the contributions are very good, justifying the whole publication.
— Latin American Studies
I highly recommend Foreign Policy toward Cuba: Isolation or Engagement? It should be required reading for anyone interested in foreign policy, international relations, Latin American studies, and politics in general.
— The Latin Americanist
This is a wonderful exploration of the myriad facets of an increasingly important question. The book is comprehensive, well-written, and a useful resource for policy-makers and students.
— Kirk Bowman, Georgia Tech