Synopses & Reviews
After a turbulent century characterized by vast bloodshed, but also by the spread of democratic government and humane values, the author suggests that the great democracies--led by Britain, France, Germany, Japan and the US--should form an intercontinental community of democracies--
Pax Democratica according to the author. He argues that such a union will culminate centuries of evolution in world order: from empires to balance-of-power Realpolitik, more recently from cooperative international institutions to an era of supranational communities, composed of likeminded peoples and organized around democratic principles.
Review
“This important book makes an impressive case for the construction of 'an Intercontinental community of Democracies' . . . refreshingly undogmatic . . . innovative proposals by which existing structures like NATO might be re-configured and new ones created.” —
Foreign Affairs“What Huntley has accomplished is to introduce a compelling new internationalist vision and present a well-reasoned argument for its acceptance in the language used by decision-makers . . . Huntley's overall vision of an international community of democracies is the best foreign policy strategy imaginable for America to pursue in the next century.” —Washington Free Press
About the Author
James Robert Huntley is a former diplomat and an author on international affairs.
Table of Contents
An ABC of International OrganizationsWar, Demographic Cleansing, and Democracy * How the Democracies Saved Democracy: 1940-90 * The Long Search for International Order * The Challenge Ahead * The Democracies' Unfinished Business * Likemindedness and the Democratic Peoples * The Vision and its Critics * The Architecture of
Pax Democratica