Abstract

Chapter 1 Old or New Ball Game? Mass Media, Public Opinion, and Foreign Policy in the Post-Cold War World Part 2 Part I: The Media and Foreign Policy Chapter 3 Declarations of Independence: The Growth of Media Power after the Cold War Chapter 4 Media and Public Sphere without Borders? News Coverage and Power from Kurdistan to Kosovo Chapter 5 New Issues and the Media: American and German News Coverage of the Global Warming Debate Chapter 6 Government's Little Helper: U.S. Press Coverage of Foreign Policy Crises,1946-1999 Chapter 7 Toward General Theories of the Media, Public Opinion, and Foreign Policy Part 8 Part II: Public and Elite Attitudes after the Cold War Chapter 9 Elite Misperceptions of U.S. Public Opinion and Foreign Policy Chapter 10 To Intervene or Not to Intervene in Bosnia: That Was the Question for the United States and Europe Chapter 11 Internationalism at Bay? A Contextual Analysis of Americans' Post-Cold War Foreign Policy Attitudes Chapter 12 NATO and European Security after the Cold War: Will European Citizens Support a Common Security Policy? Chapter 13 Public Opinion after the Cold War: A Paradigm Shift Chapter 14 Public Opinion and Decisionmaking in Russia: The Impact of NATO Expansion and Airstrikes on Serbia Chapter 15 Public Attitudes after the Cold War Part 16 Part III: The Public Opinion-Foreign Policy Linkage Chapter 17 Who Leads and Who Follows? U.S. Presidents, Public Opinion, and Foreign Policy Chapter 18 Public Opinion and European Integration: Permissive Consensus or Premature Politicization? Chapter 19 Constraint, Catalyst or Political Tool? The French Public and Foreign Policy Chapter 20 Where Angels Fear to Tread: Italian Public Opinion and Foreign Policy Chapter 21 Toward a Comparative Analysis of the Public Opinion-Foreign Policy Connection

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