John B. Judislink
In addition to being a visiting
scholar at the Carnegie Endowment,
John. B. Judis is a senior editor
of The New Republic, for whom
he has written since 1984. Judis'
articles have appeared in The
American Prospect, The
New York Times Magazine,
The Washington Post, Foreign
Affairs, The Washington Monthly,
Wilson Quarterly, Mother Jones,
and Dissent. He
is the author of five books,
including "William F. Buckley:
Patron Saint of the Conservatives,"
and "The Paradox of American
Democracy: Elites, Interests
and the Betrayal of Public Trust."
His new book is "The Folly
of Empire: What George W. Bush
could learn from Theodore Roosevelt
and Woodrow Wilson." It
was published by Scribner in
2004
The Folly of Empire :
What George W. Bush Could Learn
from Theodore Roosevelt and
Woodrow Wilson. John
Judis draws sharp contrasts
between the Bush administration's
policies, especially with regard
to Iraq, and those of every
administration from Franklin
Roosevelt through Bill Clinton.
The result is a thought-provoking
look at America's position in
the world—then and now.
link
to Amazon | listen
at NPR & read an excerpt
from the book | book
review "History Debunks
Bush Myth"
by Jim Lobe
The Paradox of American
Democracy : Elites, Special
Interests, and the Betrayal
of Public Trustlink
to Amazon
Articles
by the author
American Power and Empire
by John Judis - Edited
transcript of remarks, 10/19/04,
Carnegie Council-Eckerd College
"America and the World"
Lecture , St. Petersburg, Florida. link
to transcript
Articles by John Judis in
The American Prrospect Onlinelink
to articles
"Whither the Democrats?"
International Economy,,
Winter, 2003 link
to article