1st Edition

The African American Voice in U.S. Foreign Policy Since World War II

Edited By Michael L. Krenn Copyright 1999
    312 Pages
    by Routledge

    312 Pages
    by Routledge

    Following World War II, America was witness to two great struggles. The first was on
    the international front and involved the fight for freedom around the globe, as millions
    of people in Asia and Africa rose up to throw off their European colonial masters. In
    the decades following 1945 dozens of new nations joined the ranks of independent
    countries. Following the Civil War, the African-American voice in U.S. foreign affairs
    continued to grow. In the late nineteenth century, a few African-Americans — such as
    Frederick Douglass — even served as U.S. diplomats to the "black republics" of Liberia
    and Haiti. When America began its overseas thrust during the 1890s, African-American
    opinion was divided.

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    Introduction
    American Negroes and U.S. Foreign Policy: 1937-1967
    Alfred 0. Hero Jr.
    American Black Leaders:
    The Response to Colonialism and the Cold War, 1943-1953
    James L. Roark
    Black Critics of Colonialism and the Cold War
    Mark Solomon
    Evolution of the Black Foreign Policy Constituency
    Brenda Gayle Plummer
    The Cold War: Its Impact on the Black Liberation Struggle
    Within the United States — P arts I a n d II
    Charles W. Cheng
    Josephine Baker, Racial Protest, and the Cold War
    Mary L. Dudziak
    Ralph Bunche and Afro-American Participation
    in Decolonization
    Robert Harris
    From Hope to Disillusion: African Americans, the United
    Nations, and the Struggle for Human Rights, 1944-1947
    Carol Anderson
    Hands Across the Water: Afro-American Lawyers and the
    Decolonization of Southern Africa
    Gerald Horne
    The Civil-Rights Movement and American Foreign Policy
    James A. Moss
    Martin Luther King, Jr. and the War in Vietnam
    Adam Fairclough
    Blacks and the Vietnam War
    Peter B. Levy
    Acknowledgments

    Biography

    Michael L. Krenn