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2003

6 1/8 x 9 1/4 in.
484 pp., 25 b&w illus., 3 figures, 12 charts, 20 tables

ISBN: 978-0-292-77124-6
$60.00, hardcover with dust jacket
33% website discount: $40.20

 
 

The University of Texas Press will be closed for Thanksgiving on November 26 and 27; we will reopen on Monday, November 30.

 
 
     

Concept and Controversy
Sixty Years of Taking Ideas to Market

By W. W. Rostow

 

Table of Contents and Excerpt

available through netLibrary

 

"Rostow can be placed in the category of Dean Rusk and others who pondered difficult issues, made judgments, and had to live with them.... He was part of the establishment, a wise man, one who was very successful.... [His] memoirs are bound to interest many people, scholars and officials alike. They [offer] a fascinating look at several decades of history and scholarship."

—Thomas W. Zeiler, author of Dean Rusk: Defending the American Mission Abroad

A trusted advisor to Presidents Eisenhower, Kennedy, and Johnson and one of America's leading professors of economic history, W. W. Rostow has helped shape the intellectual debate and governmental policies on major economic, political, and military issues since World War II. In this thought-provoking memoir, he takes a retrospective look at eleven key policy problems with which he has been involved to show how ideas flow into concrete action and how actions taken or not taken in the short term actually determine the long run that we call "the future."

The issues that Rostow discusses are these:

  • The use of air power in Europe in the 1940s
  • Working toward a united Europe during the Cold War
  • The death of Joseph Stalin and early attempts to end the Cold War
  • Eisenhower's Open Skies policy
  • The debate over foreign aid in the 1950s
  • The economic revival of Korea
  • Efforts to control inflation in the 1960s
  • Waiting for democracy in China
  • The Vietnam War and Southeast Asian policy
  • U.S. urban problems in disadvantaged neighborhoods
  • The challenges posed by declining population in the twenty-first century

In discussing how he and others have worked to meet these challenges, Rostow builds a compelling case for including long-term forces in the making of current policy. He concludes his memoir with provocative reflections on the twentieth and twenty-first centuries and on how individual actors shape history.

W. W. Rostow was Rex G. Baker Professor Emeritus of Political Economy at the University of Texas at Austin. His sixty-year career also included service in the U.S. State Department, and he served as special assistant to Presidents Kennedy and Johnson. Among his more than thirty previous books are The Stages of Economic Growth, The World Economy: History and Prospect, and Theorists of Economic Growth from David Hume to the Present with a Perspective on the Next Century.


 Of Related Interest Bruneau and Boraz, Reforming Intelligence
Bruneau and Tollefson, Who Guards the Guardians and How
Pearlstein, Fatal Future?

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