Grand Strategy and the American Century: Enduring Trends and Emerging Challenges

Grand Strategy and the American Century: Enduring Trends and Emerging Challenges

<p>YALE Brady-Johnson Program in Grand Strategy</p><p>Grand Strategy and the American Century: Enduring Trends and Emerging Challenges March 30-31, 2017 Horchow Hall, GM Room 55 Hillhouse Ave., New Haven CT</p><p>(Final Version, February 28, 2017)</p><p>The past one hundred years since U.S. entry into World War I in 1917 are often called the “American Century.” This period was marked by almost continuous growth in U.S. involvement in world affairs leading up to superpower status during the Cold War period, and ultimately to the position of preponderant power during the past quarter century since the fall of the Soviet Union. As such, the past century is a period of considerable continuity in U.S. grand strategy. At the same time, the United States has had to face evolving challenges to its core international goals, from the peril of German domination over Europe (twice), to the need to contain communism, to interstate terrorism. Indeed, the first quarter of the American Century were shaped by strong isolationism sentiment in the United States – a sentiment that now seems to be resurgent. </p><p>This conference aims at evaluating the evolving trends in U.S. strategy during this period and extrapolating lessons for current and future U.S. foreign policy. Panels will cover the U.S. participation in World War I, the interwar period, the Cold War and its end, and the “unipolar moment” of American dominance, as well as analyze emerging challenges and constraints to U.S. grand strategy, such as international law, climate change, global pandemics, and human displacement and migration. Participants are drawn from the fields of history, political science, international law, and global health. </p><p>Conference Program</p><p>DAY 1 – March 30, 2017</p><p>08:30-09:00 Breakfast</p><p>09:00-09:15 Opening Elizabeth Bradley (Yale University) Remarks Nuno P. Monteiro (Yale University)</p><p>09:15-10:45 U.S. Participation in World War I</p><p>Chair: Paul Kennedy (Yale University)</p><p>Presenters: Christopher Capozzola (MIT) Christopher Nichols (Oregon State University) John Maurer (Naval War College)</p><p>1 10:45-11:00 Coffee Break</p><p>11:00-12:30 U.S. Strategy in the Interwar Period </p><p>Chair: Beverly Gage (Yale University)</p><p>Presenters: Patricia Clavin (Oxford University) Charlie Laderman (Cambridge University) David Milne (University of East Anglia)</p><p>12:30-02:00 Lunch</p><p>02:00-03:30 U.S. Strategy during the Cold War </p><p>Chair: John Lewis Gaddis (Yale University)</p><p>Presenters: Elizabeth Borgwardt (Washington University in St. Louis) Fredrik Logevall (Harvard University) Erez Manela (Harvard University) Arne Westad (Harvard University)</p><p>03:30-04:00 Coffee Break</p><p>04:00-05:30 Keynote Session</p><p>A debate on the future of U.S. grand strategy with: Barry Posen (MIT) and Thomas Wright (Brookings) Moderated by Nuno Monteiro (Yale University)</p><p>05:30-07:00 Break</p><p>07:00-09:00 Dinner</p><p>Venue: The Graduate Club 155 Elm St, New Haven</p><p>DAY 2 – March 31, 2017</p><p>08:30-09:00 Breakfast</p><p>09:00-10:30 U.S. Strategy and the End of the Cold War </p><p>Chair: Christopher Miller (Yale University)</p><p>Presenters: Hal Brands (Johns Hopkins University)</p><p>2 Serhii Plokhii (Harvard University) Mary Sarotte (University of Southern California)</p><p>10:30-11:00 Coffee Break</p><p>11:00-12:30 U.S. Strategy in the Unipolar Moment</p><p>Chair: Nuno Monteiro (Yale University)</p><p>Presenters: Charles Kupchan (Georgetown University / CFR) John Mearsheimer (University of Chicago) Stephen Walt (Harvard University) William Wohlforth (Dartmouth College)</p><p>12:30-02:00 Lunch</p><p>02:00-04:00 Emerging Challenges to U.S. Grand Strategy</p><p>Chair: Aleh Tsyvinski (Yale University)</p><p>Presenters: International law: Daniel Abebe (University of Chicago Law School) Migration: Sunil Amrith (Harvard University) C limate change: Joshua Busby (U Texas at Austin) Global pandemics: Kristina Talbert-Slagle (Yale University)</p><p>04:00-04:30 Coffee Break</p><p>04:30-05:30 Wrap-Up Discussion: The Future of U.S. Grand Strategy</p><p>Moderators: John Lewis Gaddis (Yale University) Beverly Gage (Yale University)</p><p>05:30-07:00 Break</p><p>07:00-09:00 Dinner</p><p>Venue: The Quinnipiack Club 221 Church St, New Haven</p><p>3</p>

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