American Statesmen: Secretaries of State from John Jay to Colin Powell

Front Cover
Edward Mihalkanin
Bloomsbury Academic, Aug 30, 2004 - Biography & Autobiography - 571 pages

The Secretary of State is in charge of defining and implementing U.S. foreign policy. While that role has weakened some over the past 50 years, a mere roll call of illustrious past Secretaries of State invokes the position's importance. Thomas Jefferson, Henry Kissinger, John Quincy Adams, William Jennings Bryan, Henry Clay, James Madison, George C. Marshall, George Schultz, and Daniel Webster are just a few of the Secretaries profiled within these 65 entries. Arranged A-to-Z, each essay is multifaceted, offering information personal, professional, and political. The majority of each piece deals with foreign policy ideas before he or she became the Secretary, what American foreign policy was like while in office, and the major foreign policy issues during tenure. Each piece concludes with a concise and useful bibliography.

A unique look at U.S. foreign policy making and diplomacy through the experience of the person whose job is to craft and implement it. Each secretary's early life and background are included, as is his or her education and influences. Careers before becoming Secretary of State are detailed, as are expressions of ideas relating to U.S. foreign policy prior to appointment. Then the piece examines his tenure in office itself, from appointment as secretary, to relations with the President, Cabinet and Congress. Most importantly the major foreign policy issues of the day are given a thorough going over. Finally the circumstances of leaving office, a post-career summary, and then a general assessment of his or accomplishments and shortcomings as secretary.

About the author (2004)

EDWARD S. MIHALKANIN is Associate Professor of Political Science at Texas State University, San Marcos. He is the author of The Role of the Embassador with Warren Kieth Neisler in U.S.-Latin American Policymaking: A Reference Handbook (1995), The Abkhazians: A Minority in their Own Homeland, in De Facto States: The Quest for Sovereignty (2003), and, with Robert Gorman, Historical Dictionary of Human Rights and Humanitarian Organizations (1997).

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