Financial Missionaries to the World : The Politics and Culture of Dollar Diplomacy, 1900-1930 /
The history of "dollar diplomacy," using US financial clout to influence the actions of foreign governments.
Autor principal: | |
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Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Durham [N.C.] :
Duke University Press,
2003.
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Colección: | Book collections on Project MUSE.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Introduction
- 1 Gold-Standard Visions: International Currency Reformers, 1898-1905
- The Meanings of Money and Markets
- Turning Silver Standards into Gold
- The Commission on International Exchange
- The New Specialists in International Financial Advising
- 2 The Roosevelt Corollary and the Dominican Model of 1905
- Gender, Race, National Interest, and Civilization
- The Dominican Model
- Development of Investment Banking
- International Precedents for Fiscal Control
- Fiscal Control through Public-Private Partnership
- 3 The Changing Forms of Controlled Loans under Taft and Wilson
- Extending the Dominican Model
- Control by Private Contract
- Opposition to Taft's Dollar Diplomacy
- Tightening Dollar Diplomacy under Wilson
- Public-Private Interactions and Consenting Parties
- 4 Private Money, Public Policy, 1921-1923
- The Postwar Political Economy and Loan Policy
- Postwar Controlled Loans in the Western Hemisphere
- 5 Opposition to Financial Imperialism, 1919-1926
- The Postwar Anti-imperialist Impulse
- "Is America Imperialistic?" Conflicting Cultural Narratives
- Anti-imperialist Insurgency after 1924
- The U.S. Government Backs Away
- 6 Stabilization Programs and Financial Missions in New Guises, 1924-1928
- Approaches to Stabilization
- The Kemmerer Missions in South America
- European Stabilization and the Dawes Plan
- Poland: A Kemmerer Mission in Europe
- Persia: The Millspaugh Mission
- 7 Faith in Professionalism, Fascination with Primitivism
- Professionalization and Financial Markets
- Mass Culture and Primitivism
- 8 Dollar Diplomacy in Decline, 1927-1930
- The Questionable Impact of Supervisory Missions
- Opposition to U.S. Supervision
- Deterioration of the Bond Market and the End of Foreign Lending
- Public Policy and the End of an Era
- Looking Backward and Forward.