<b>A vibrant celebration of President Obama in words and photographs, now updated with new material on the years since he left office.</b> Through stunning images by White House photographers and others, as well as notable essays and quotes from a broad spectrum of people, this updated edition of
Evaluating the Obama Presidency
β Scribed by Meena Bose, Paul Fritz
- Publisher
- De Gruyter
- Year
- 2024
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 298
- Series
- De Gruyter Series in Presidential Politics, Leadership, and Policy Making
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
In 2007 and 2008, Barack Obama ran for president with a message of a shared purpose uniting all Americans, and was elected with expectations that he would usher in a new national culture under an approach grounded in public engagement that would transcend partisan divisions. But in an institutional system designed for incremental and contested policy-making governance, enacting these transformational ambitions proved to be far more difficult than anticipated. This innovative volume assesses the legacy of President Obama, with a conceptual focus on the challenge of meeting his goals with the realities of governing. A diverse group of political science, history, and communication studies experts systematically examines Obama's performance, accomplishments, and shortcomings through the lens of the expectations gap - the tensions and obstacles of translating campaign promises into policies. The wide, representative set of case studies address campaigning and coalition building, party polarization, presidential communication, executive power, leadership and decision-making, and domestic and foreign policy. With original and deep analysis, these scholars make a unique, enduring contribution to understanding the Obama presidency, the office of the president, and indeed American politics. This insightful, accessible book will be of great interest to students and scholars of the presidency, political communication & rhetoric, and broadly across US government and democracy.
β¦ Table of Contents
Contents
List of Figures
Chapter 1 Introduction: Evaluating the Obama Presidency
Part I: Winning Elections and Building Political Coalitions
Chapter 2 The Transformation of Presidential Fundraising During the Obama Years
Chapter 3 The Obama Coalitionβs Kryptonite: Ralph Stanley, Bruce Springsteen, and the White Working Class
Part II: Planning, Governance, and Policy Making
Chapter 4 Why Health Care Came First, and Other Observations on Barack Obamaβs Early Domestic Policy Agenda
Chapter 5 A Green Presidency? Barack Obama and the Environment
Chapter 6 Obamaβs Domestic Policy Making and the Administrative Presidency
Chapter 7 Developing a Bench: President Obamaβs Judicial Appointment Legacy
Chapter 8 Women and the Obama Administration: Gender Policy at Home and Abroad
Chapter 9 The US and Russia during the Obama Administration: An Inevitable Return of Great Power Politics?
Chapter 10 The Obama Legacy on Nuclear Weapons: Transformative Vision, Pragmatic Results
Chapter 11 Why Ask? Presidential Leverage and Obamaβs Decision to Seek Congressional Authorization for the Use of Force against Syria
Part III: Communication, Executive Power, and Leadership
Chapter 12 Obama, the Pen, and the Phone: Promises to Policies
Chapter 13 The Genius of America and the Model Immigrant: Barack Obamaβs Rhetorical Characterization of DACA Recipients
Chapter 14 Race, Representation, and Reaction in the Obama Presidency
Chapter 15 Obamaβs Presidency: Redemption and the Misdirected Search for Presidential Greatness
Contributors
Acknowledgments
Index
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
224 pages : 29 cm
Back in 2007, when Barack Hussein Obama announced his campaign, his election seemed to be a long shot. But he won in a decisive victory, also garnering a record 69.5 million votes, and on January 20, 2009, he became the 44th president of the United States and its first African American chief executi
Barack Obama arrived in Washington in 2008 symbolizing the political change he promised on the campaign trail during his historic presidential victory. But in many ways, Washington changed Obama more than Obama changed Washington. This is the story of how the idealist of the 2008 campaign evolved in
Barack Obamaβs inauguration as president on January 20, 2009, inspired the world. But the great promise of βChange We Can Believe Inβ was immediately tested by the threat of another Great Depression, a worsening war in Afghanistan, and an entrenched and deeply partisan system of business as usual in