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Index
Cover
Title
Contents
Preface My Students Got Me Thinking
Introduction Does History Make Statesmen or Do Statesmen Make History?
Managing Major Power Rivalries
1. Henry Kissinger, Zhou Enlai, and the U.S.-China Opening, 1971–1972
2. Mikhail Gorbachev: Ending the Cold War, 1985–1991
Trump-Putin, Trump-Xi, And Major Powers Statesmanship
Building International Institutions
3. Wilson and FDR: Failure of the League of Nations, Birth of the United Nations
4. UN Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjöld: The “Secular Pope,” 1953–1961
A HammarskjöLdian Secretary-General
Reconciling the Politics of Identity
5. Nelson Mandela: Iconic Statesman of Reconciliation, 1956–1999
6. Yitzhak Rabin: Soldier as Peacemaker, 1992–1995
7. Mairead Corrigan and Betty Williams: Northern Ireland Women for Peace, 1972–1977
Politics of Identity’s Alternative Plotline
Advancing Freedom and Protecting Human Rights
8. Gandhi: Exemplar of Anticolonialism, Apostle of Nonviolence, 1914–1948
9. Lech Walesa: From Communism to Democracy, 1980–1990
10. Aung San Suu Kyi: A Cautionary Tale, 1988–
11. Peter Benenson, Amnesty International and the Global Human Rights Movement, 1961–1967
Backlash and Backsliding, or Renewed Breakthroughs
Fostering Global Sustainability
12. Gro Harlem Brundtland: Our Common Future, 1987–2003
13. Gates Foundation and Global Health Philanthropy Statesmanship, 2000–
EMD, DMD, And Global Sustainability
Epilogue: Twenty-First-Century Statesmanship: Difficult, Possible, Necessary
Acknowledgments
Notes
Index
Also by Bruce W. Jentleson
Copyright
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