Site MapHelpFeedbackFrom "The Age of Limits: to the Age of Reagan": Politics and Diplomacy After Watergate
From "The Age of Limits: to the Age of Reagan": Politics and Diplomacy After Watergate

Main Themes

1. That Gerald Ford managed to restore confidence in the presidency but remained unable to make significant breakthroughs in solving the nation's international and economic problems.

2. That the difficult problems faced by Jimmy Carter, including a sluggish economy, an energy crunch, and a Middle Eastern crisis, combined with his leadership style to ensure that he would be a one-term president.

3. That Ronald Reagan's personality soothed Americans and his brand of conservatism struck a responsive chord as he moved toward a reduced role for government in the economy and an increased emphasis on the military.

4. How the New Right challenged the liberal-moderate consensus that had dominated American politics since the New Deal.

5. How the end of the Cold War turned foreign policy focus to other matters, especially the Middle East.


Learning Objectives
A thorough study of Chapter Thirty-Three should enable the student to understand:

The efforts of President Gerald Ford to overcome the effects of Richard Nixon's resignation.

The rapid emergence of Jimmy Carter as a national figure and the reasons for his victory in 1976.

Carter's emphasis on human rights and its effects on international relations.

Carter's role in bringing about the Camp David agreement and the impact of this agreement on the Middle East.

Why the United States had so much difficulty in freeing the hostages held by Iran and the effect of this episode on the Carter presidency.

The nature of the "Reagan revolution" and the meaning of "supply-side" economics.

The staunchly anticommunist Reagan foreign policy.

The changing demography of America from 1970 to 1990.

The increasingly conservative mood of the American electorate.

The emergence of a new era in foreign policy with the collapse of the Soviet Union.








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