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Christopher st capital island3/23/2023 ![]() So they're not just an accretion of them like bricks in a wall, but rather the structure itself, what the wall is intended to become, perhaps. You have to have those ideas, those conceptions, those notions. So I would say ideologies are constituted by ideas. So how does ideology differ from ideas? Or are they the same thing? So ideology is about that set of assumptions or core values and principles and organizing them to make sense of the world such that you can then make arguments for kinds of paths forward that you might want. Ideologies are the kinds of structures that set the terms for engagement. We need ideologies in short to help make a complex world more finite and to help figure out perhaps how to forge paths forward in the policy making realm. One of the things that ideologies suggest is that they're based on assumptions and core principles that guide the construction of a worldview. So let's begin there in with you, Chris, What does a term ideology mean to you? We are all academics by trade, though my status as an academic may have lapsed, but one of the standard practices of academia is to begin by defining your terms. Chris, Emily, and Jay, thanks for chatting with me. ![]() He has written, edited her co-edited seven books, the most recent of which is A Nation Forged by Crisis, a New American History.Ĭhris is the co-editor of the new book, Ideology in Foreign Policy, New Histories to which he, Emily, and Jay have all contributed chapters. Jay is the Rich and Nancy Kinder, Chair of Constitutional Democracy, professor of History, and director of the Kinder Institute at the University of Missouri. She is the author of Christian Imperialism, Converting the World in the Early American Republic. Her work focuses on 19th century America with a specialization in religion and foreign relations. Chris has been the recipient of an Andrew Carnegie Fellowship, and he has written or edited six books including Promise and Peril America at the dawn of a global Age.Įmily is an associate professor of history at Michigan State University. ![]() Chris is the Wayne Woodrow Hayes Chair in National Security Studies and a Professor of History at the Ohio State University. With me to discuss ideology in American foreign policy making are Christopher Nichols, Emily Conroy-Krutz, and Jay Sexton. ![]() This week's topic is the role of ideology in US foreign policy. I'm Jim Lindsay, Director of Studies at the Council on Foreign Relations. Welcome to the President's Inbox, a CFR podcast about the foreign policy challenges facing the United States. ![]()
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